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CECE CG G EG CCE COE CC CT je (Cae SS aT a «4 ~ (|@ < = CECE LCE CK (COC CC KCC = y vw ae On EL “SS MusEUM 2 Ma eer NEW SPECIES OF HALIPLUS LATR. (COL.). BY EDWARD A. CHAPIN. In arranging the National collection of beetles of the family Haliplidae four species were encountered that appear to be undescribed. These are characterized below and the position of each in the system as formulated by Alois Zimmermann in | Entomologische Blatter, Vol. 20, 1924, is indicated. Haliplus philippinus, n. sp. Nearest to H. ferruginetpes Regimbart. Reddish-yellow with piceous maculation. Form elliptical, greatest width at basal third of elytra which are obliquely truncate at apices, margin of truncature entire. Head very sparsely and finely punctured, front not broad. Pronotum more than twice as wide as long (length-width ratio, 10:25), with the anterior margin angularly produced medianly, the apex of the angulation in advance of the anterior lateral angles, surface moderately coarsely but sparsely punc- tured. The punctures near the basal margin are arranged roughly in two transverse rows which tend to bound the slightly depressed basal portion. Near each posterior lateral angle there are three or four very coarse and subconfluent punctures. Elytra with the punctures of the primary rows only slightly coarser than those of the secondary rows; on apical half it is hardly possible to trace the individual rows of either series. Punctures of lateral rows more coarse than those of dorsal rows, epipleura with two rows of very coarse punctures on basal half, the inner of which is continued onto the apical half as a row of very fine punctures while the outer row extends onto the apical half for some distance without material reduction in size of individual punctures. Prosternum almost parallel-sided, slightly constricted just before the coxae, strongly margined, with three poorly defined longitudinal rows of punctures. Metasternal process with a deep oval pit on either side, otherwise with about a dozen fine punctures. Posterior coxal plates coarsely and sparsely punctured. Maculation as follows: pronotum with an ill-defined dark spot at middle of anterior margin (sometimes absent); elytra with suture and base for a short distance either side of the scutellum dark, also with an isolated spot 5—Proc. Bion. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (9) 10 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. at apical third, situated equi-distant from suture and lateral margin. The sutural vitta is expanded at the middle of its length into a rectangular spot which is of indefinite extent apically but which is well defined basally and which constantly bears a lateral comma-shaped outgrowth at each basal angle. Length: 2.5-2.8 mm. Type and eight paratypes, U.S. N. M. No. 41757, from Bacoor, Manila, Philippine Ids., P. L. Stangl, collector. Type a male, paratypes a male and seven females. Runs without difficulty to group 6, section 2, of Zimmermann’s key and takes its place beside H. ferrugineipes Rég. from New Guinea. It is dis- tinguished from this last-mentioned species by the coarse punctures of the secondary rows on the elytra. Haliplus cubensis, n. sp. Nearest to H. ornattpennis Zimmermann. Pale castaneous, pronotum and elytra with piceous maculations. Form broadly oval, widest at basal third of elytra, elytra acuminate, obliquely truncate at apices, truncature finely margined but entire. Head rather sparsely but distinctly punctured, front moderately broad. Pronotum more than twice as wide as long (length-width ratio, 10:23), with anterior margin very slightly angulated at middle, anterior angles acute, well in advance of median angulation, sur- face coarsely and moderately densely punctured on disc, sparsely punctured laterally, punctures along basal margin more coarse and arranged in a line. EHlytra with the usual ten primary rows of punctures, the punctures of the sutural rows much finer than those of the three lateral rows. The punctures of the first secondary row almost as large as those of the first primary and evenly distributed throughout the length of the elytron. Other secondary rows incomplete, especially in apical half. Basal haif of epipleura with two rows of very coarse punctures, apical half with one row of fine punctures situated close to inner margin. Prosternum almost parallel-sided, just perceptibly widened in front, lateral margins thickened, median line slightly raised and impunctate. Metasternal process with a round pit on either side, otherwise impunctate. Posterior coxal plates coarsely and sparsely punctured. Maculation as follows: anterior and posterior margins of pronotum darker in median half, the two color masses tending to coalesce along the median line; basal and sutural margins of elytra dark, the sutural vitta expanded at middle and before apex. The median expansion is roughly pentagonal] (angle of pentagon on suture directed toward apex) and at each basal angle it gives off a broad process which in turn connects with an ill-defined subhumeral spot. The subapical expansion joins at its basal end an elongate spot. There are also on each elytron two sublateral spots, one at apical third and one in the angle between the lateral margin and the apical truncature. Length: 2.5 mm. Type and paratype, U.S. N. M. No. 41758, from Cayamas, Cuba, May 11, E. A. Schwarz, collector. Chapin—New Species of Haliplus Latr. (Col.). 11 In Zimmermann’s key this species fits best into group 9, section 1. It appears to have much in common with H. ornatipennis Zimm., the only species of this section known up to the present. The species may be separated by the shape of the metasternal pits (here round and not at all elongate) and by the absence, in H. cubensis, of serration of the lateral margins of the elytra. Haliplus panamanus, n. sp. Nearest to H. obconicus Régimbart. Reddish-yellow, pronotum and elytra with piceous maculations. Form broadly oval, widest at basal third of elytra, elytra with apical truncature not sharply set off from lateral margin, margins entire. Head finely punctate, densely on front, sparsely on vertex. Front rather narrow. Pronotum more than twice as broad as long (length-width ratio 11:26), anterior margin with a feeble median angulation, lateral portions densely and moderately coarsely punctured, median area with finer and more sparsely set punctures. Elytra with punctures of primary rows coarse and subequal throughout the length of the rows, tenth row not very much coarser than ninth. First secondary row very irregular on basal half, second secondary row uniform throughout its length, composed of fine but distinct punctures. Basal half of epipleura with two rows of coarse punctures, the inner of which is represented on the apical half by two or three coarse, widely separated punctures. Proster- num strongly widened anteriorly, finely and densely punctured, slightly tumid along the median line. Metasternal process with two large sub- circular pits on either side of the median line. Posterior coxal plates coarsely and rather densely punctured. Maculation as follows: on the pronotum a single small roundish spot at middle of anterior margin; on elytra five small spots on each and three larger spots along suture in apical half which are mutually connected. The location of the small spots may be indicated thus: at base a small spot lying between the third and fifth primary rows; at basal fourth two spots, the one nearer the suture slightly behind the other, the one between the second and fourth, the other between the fifth and seventh primary rows. The inner of the spots is connected by a narrow line of color with the first and largest of the common sutural spots; slightly postmedian and between the fifth and seventh primary rows is a spot and at apical fourth a spot between the third and fourth primary rows which nearly touches the second of the sutural spots. The basal half of the suture is also very narrowly dark. Length: 2.8 mm. Type, U. S. N. M. No. 41759, from Tabernilla, Canal Zone, Panama, July 20, 1907, A. Busck, collector. Belongs in group 9, section 4 of Zimmermann’s system. Its nearest relative is H. obconicus Rég. from which it may be distinguished by the nearly uniform size of the punctures throughout the length of the primary rows and by the second secondary row being single and uniform throughout its length. 12 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Haliplus crassus, n. sp. Nearest to H. robustus Sharp. Bright reddish-yellow, pronotum and ely- tra with piceous maculations. Form broad, very robust, widest just behind the humeri, elytra acuminate, obliquely truncate at apices, trunca- ture finely serrate. Head finely and sparsely (very sparsely on vertex) punctured, front rather narrow. Pronotum more than twice as broad as long (length-width ratio, 16:35), more coarsely and densely punctured than head, especially on the anterior half of the disc, the punctures along the lateral margins coarser than the others. Elytra shining, the punctures forming the outer (lateral) primary rows not more coarse than those of the discal rows and on the apical half the punctures of the primary and secon- dary rows are of almost the same size. On the basal half the punctures of the primary rows are as usual much coarser than those of the secondaries. First secondary row composed of fine punctures so closely set as to form an almost continuous groove, second secondary row double in basal third, punctures at base of elytra greatly confused. Basal half of epipleura with the usual two rows of very coarse punctures, the apical half with but one (inner) row of very fine punctures. Prosternum broad, almost parallel- sided, closely but not coarsely punctured, lateral longitudinal grooves shallow. Metasternal process finely and densely (especially laterally) punctured. Posterior coxal plates coarsely and rather sparsely punctured. Maculation as follows: anterior two-thirds of disc of pronotum with an. irregular dark spot; base of elytra from suture to fifth primary rows and suture dark. Sutural vitta with three expansions, one antemedian, irregu- lar and reaching to the fourth primary row, a second postmedian, touching the third primary row, and a third at apical third reaching the third secon- dary row. At latitude of the first expansion there is on each elytron an. irregular spot lying mainly between the fifth and seventh primary rows, sometimes connected by a narrow isthmus with the sutural expansion. Postmedian, between the fourth secondary row and the seventh primary row there is a bipolar spot connected at its apical end with the basal end of the subapical sutural expansion. Laterally there are two spots on each elytron, one at two-fifths from apex, the other in the angle between the lateral margin and the truncature. Length: 3.7 mm. Type, U.S. N. M. No. 41760, a male from Cabima, Panama, May 28, 1911, A. Busck, collector. Belongs in group 9, section 5, of Zimmermann’s key, where it may be differentiated from H. robustus Sharp by the absence of longitudinal lines, by the very sharply defined pattern and by the sparse punctuation of the head. Vol. 43, pp. 13-16 March 12, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE o BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASH RECORDS OF THE WOOD TORTOISE (CLEMMYS—————~ INSCULPTA) IN THE VICINITY OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. BY AUSTIN H. CLARK.! The wood or sculptured tortoise (Clemmys insculpta) reaches the southern limit of its distribution within, and in the imme- diate vicinity of, the District of Columbia. It is sufficiently uncommon in this region to warrant a detailed list of the cap- tures. It was first recorded from the vicinity of the District by Mr. Henry W. Henshaw, who took one on the Maryland shore of the Potomac near Plummers Island on August 19, 1906 (Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, Vol. 20, p. 65, June 12, 1907). This specimen, according to Mr. Henshaw, was presented to the National Museum, but it can not now be located. About 1908 Mr. Herbert S. Barber found one on Plummers Island near the upper end which he believes he gave to Mr. William Palmer for the local exhibit in the National Museum. It is not, however, in the Museum collection. In the album of the Washington Biologists’ Field Club at Plummers Island there is a photograph of a specimen dated April 3, 1910, which is described as the second one found in that locality. Mr. Barber says that, if he remembers correctly, this individual was liberated after being examined at the Na- tional Museum, and it, or a very similar one, was seen again the following year. In 1918 Mr. W. L. McAtee wrote (Bull. Biol. Soc. Wash- ington, No. 1, May 17, 1918, p. 45) that this species had been collected several times near Plummers Island. He referred to the three (or four) mentioned above. 1Published with the permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 6—Proc. Brox. Soc. Wasu., Vou. 43, 1930. (13) 14. Proceedings of the Brological Society of Washington. Mr. Edward A. Preble found a specimen on August 25, 1918, in the valley of Pimmitt Run, Virginia, near the mouth of Little Pimmitt, or about two miles above the mouth of the main run. The head of this individual is in the National Museum (Cat. No. 61095). In the National Museum collection there is a recently hatched individual (Cat. No. 62556) with the carapace only 12 inches in length which was collected by Dr. R. W. Shufeldt in the District of Columbia in 1919. On August 9, 1922, Mr. Preble saw a good sized individual swimming in a pool in Gordon Branch, a tributary of Bullneck Run, just above the place where it crosses the Great Falls pike on the Virginia side of the Potomac. This individual escaped into a labyrinth of roots beneath an overhanging bank. On June 14, 1925, Mr. Preble saw the remains of another that had been run over and killed on the road near the same place. A year or two later he found one on his place near Gordon Branch, Virginia. It was in oak woods near the back of the hill. This-one was brought to the house and placed in a box with the intention of photographing it and then presenting it to the National Zoological Park. But it was stolen from the box before either intention could be carried out. In the late spring or early summer of 1928 Mr. Clarence R. Shoemaker captured a specimen on Muineshoe Island in the Potomac about three-quarters of a mile above Cabin John bridge, and just below the first lock above Cabin John. On June 24, 1928, Mr. Barber found one on the bank of the Potomac near Black Pond on the Virginia shore about three miles from Plummers Island. Like those which he had pre- viously found at Plummers Island, this one was discovered on a recently freshet-swept bank under dense woods. It is now in the National Museum (Cat. No. 76591). In the summer of 1928 Mr. Kenneth L. Hobbs presented to the National Zoological Park an individual which had been found at Cabin John. On May 19, 1929, Mr. Hugh U. Clark found an unusually large individual in a small shallow pond which occasionally becomes completely dry situated in open woods 2.5 miles west of Cabin John, a few hundred feet east of the underpass beneath Clark—Records of Wood Tortoise in Vicinity of D.C. 15 the canal, and between the canal and the small brook just north of it. This specimen, a male, gave the following measurements: Length, measured around the dorsal curve of the carapace, 94 inches; width across the middle of the central scale in the middle row, 72 inches; circumference in the same place, 14} inches; length of plastron in the median line, 6/ inches. This example was presented to the National Museum. SUMMARY OF LOCALITIES. MaryLanp: Cabin John (H. U. Clark; K. L. Hobbs); Mineshoe I. (C. R. Shoemaker); Plummers I. (H. S. Barber; Washington Biologists’ Field Club; W. L. McAtee); shore of the Potomac near Plummers I. (H. W. Henshaw; W. L. McAtee [Mr. McAtee’s published statement covers this and the immediately preceding records]). District oF CotumpBia: D. C. (R. W. Shufeldt). Virainia: Near Black Pond (H. 8. Barber); Pimmitt Run (E. A. Preble); Gordon Branch (E. A. Preble); Near Gordon Branch (E. A. Preble). PROCEEDINGS OF THE aati Vol. 43, pp. 17-20 March 12, 1930 f BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTOSer wn AN INTERESTING NEW GENUS OF ICERYINE “=< “useum 2 COCEID. SY SEUNZ BY HAROLD MORRISON. is given below has been prepared at the request of Dr. Sally Hughes-Schrader, Bryn Mawr College, in order that the tech- nical name might be available for reference purposes in connec- tion with the very interesting cytological studies which she is conducting on various species of monophlebine coccids. | The genus is of particular interest because its type and only | included species possesses in the adult female stage certain structural characters which suggest relationship with the tribe Llaveiini, although the sum total of its characters appears to | place it without question in the tribe Iceryini. / } The description of the new genus and species of coccid which | Kchinicerya, new genus. In the adult female of the genotype there are present those derm struc- tures which the writer has designated as spines in his recent classification of the genera related to this genus.! On this account the writer’s key to the tribes of Monophlebinae (ref. | cit. p. 119) must be modified in such fashion as to leave the segregation of portions of the tribes Monophlebini and Llaveiini dependent entirely upon the number of pairs of abdominal spiracles present. No modification of | the larval key to the tribes of Monophlebinae (ref. cit. p. 120) appears to be necessary, as no definitely developed spines have been observed in the first stage larva of this new species. The differentiation of the adult males as given on the same page likewise apparently remains satisfactory as regards this new species. The important characters which differentiate | this genus from other genera in the tribe Iceryini, following the writer’s keys (ref. cit. pp. 196-197), are, in the adult female, the apparently one- segmented short conical beak, three pairs of abdominal spiracles, presence of distinct spines on the derm, and the presence of numerous (about 20) 1U. S. D. A. Tech. Bull. 52, 1928. 7—Proc. Bion. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (17) 18 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. ventral cicatrices arranged in an approximate semicircle or half oval on the under side of the abdomen. In the key to the first larval stage the species will go into the group of genera including Crypticerya, Icerya, and Steatococ- cus, and can probably be differentiated from these genera by the presence of six pairs of enlarged setae at the apex of the abdomen, but so many of the species belonging to these genera have not yet been studied critically in the larval stage that it is hardly advisable to set this down as a positive differentiating characteristic. So few males are known for species belong- ing to the tribe Iceryini that no differentiating characters can be suggested which will separate the male of this species from the males of other genera. In the structures examined it appears to be entirely comparable to other known iceryine males. Type of genus.—Echinicerya anomola, new species. The detailed description of this genotype follows: Echinicerya anomola, new species. Habit.—Living exposed on the host during the growing period; eggs de- posited beneath the body of the female which becomes concave below as oviposition progresses, as in the genus Crypticerya. Adult female—Largest dimensions when covered with secretion 9 mm. long, 5 mm. wide and 5 mm. high. Entire body covered with white se- cretion and with one median incomplete row of conspicuous, elongate, truncate-conical tufts dorsally; one complete marginal row of short truncate-conical tufts, and an almost complete intermediate row of similar tufts on each side; color of denuded body in life coral-red but varying in shade. (From notes and sketches by Dr. Sally Hughes-Schrader.) Body as mounted varying; specimen examined 6 mm. long, 544 mm. wide, nearly circular but slightly narrowed anteriorly; derm thin, not chitinized, rather densely clothed with blackish spines, these occurring more densely in tufts along the body margin and dorsally, the tufts apparently coinciding with the secretionary tufts of the living female; antennae of normal monophle- bine type, 11-segmented in example studied, bearing the usual slender setae, some of which are fairly elongate, and stout sensory spines on apical segments; legs normal monophlebine type, fairly stout, trochanters with 3 to 4 sensory pores on each face, claws stout, somewhat curved, without distinct denticles, claw digitules slender, acute at tips, not nearly attain- ing the apex of claw (perhaps broken off); beak very short and stout conical with only one distinct segment, the second perhaps represented by a narrow basal collar; apica! sensory setae uncertain as to number (perhaps six altogether), each nearly cylindrical, bluntly rounded at apex, beak elsewhere bearing a number of fairly stout, acute setae; thoracic spiracles broad with loose cluster of disk pores outside opening, this more evident in posterior pair; abdominal spiracles, so far as can be determined, present in three posterior pairs, elongate, cylindrical, of the usual iceryine type; derm pores of multilocular disk type only but with several different sorts of these present, showing variation in internal organization about as illus- trated; derm bearing numerous spines and setae and a comparatively few scattered hairs; anal opening located dorsally and surrounded by a large Proc. Bron. Soc. Wasx., Vou. 43. Puate I. Anatomical Details of Echinicerya anomala. Morrison—An Interesting New Genus of Iceryine Coccid. 19 cluster of circular disk pores with stiff setae interspersed; ring at inner end of tube, slender and without pores; ventral cicatrices numerous, arranged in a large half-oval row on the ventral face of the abdomen, the posterior one median, all small, circular or somewhat irregular, total number present 20 in specimen examined. Intermediate female-—A specimen apparently representing this stage resembles the adult female in general in derm characters, including the types of pores, spines, setae and hairs present. Larva.—Hlliptical in shape or a little narrowed behind the middle, length approximately .9 mm., width .4 mm., derm membranous throughout; an- tennae 6-segmented, apical segment longest, two apical segments bearing several long slender setae, the second segment with single sensory pore at apex; legs normal monophlebine type, claws slender, curved at apices, each with distinct denticle near apex, claw digitules knobbed at tips and distinctly surpassing apex of claw, trochanters with two sensory pores on each face; beak very stout conical, 1-segmented or with a second, basal segment represented by a narrow rim, sensory setae apparently 6 to 8 in number, apices very slightly expanded and bluntly rounded; thoracic spiracles apparently not unusual; abdominal spiracles minute, slender, in three posterior pairs; derm pores of one general multilocular disk type but with few loculi; derm bearing slender setae dorsally, appearing as if in transverse rows, ventrally with setae and at least one incomplete longitudinal sub- median row of hairs on each side; with 6 pairs of distinctly enlarged setae clustered at the posterior end of the abdomen of which the outer two pairs are somewhat smaller than the remainder; lateral margin of remainder of body with shorter, but enlarged and conspicuous slender marginal setae; anal opening dorsal, inconspicuous; anal tube not chitinized, with a double band of polygonal wax pores at inner end and a single circle of disk pores a little below the middle. Adult male.—Of the usual elongate shape, total length, including apical fleshy tassels just over 3 mm., greatest width about .75 mm.; head tri- angular in outline, bearing a few normally quadrilocular disk pores and relatively numerous setae, these varying considerably in size; antennae 10-segmented, slender, the segments beyond the second each strongly binodose and bearing two whorls of setae, apical segment approximating those immediately preceding it in length; eyes strongly protruding, ocelli also conspicuous, each placed close above the anterior angle of the adjacent eye; wings dark, each about 2.5 mm. long by 1.3 mm. wide, diagonal vein extending about half way to margin as in other known iceryine males; halteres rather broad, flattened, but with only two large curved apical setae; legs slender, anterior femora with several (apparently about 23) slender bifurcate setae, claw digitules, apparently short and inconspicuous, perhaps broken off, legs otherwise normal; abdomen parallel-sided an- teriorly, tapering towards the apex, with only a single apical pair of fleshy tassels, each bearing a considerable cluster of long blackish setae at tip; with three apical pairs of abdominal spiracles, all inconspicuous; derm pores of the flat sort usually found in the adult male stage, normally quadri- locular but number of loculi observed to vary from three to five; derm setae 20 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. varying considerably in size, pale and inconspicuous except the two apical clusters already mentioned; penis sheath elongate triangular, very slightly constricted near apex, tapering to a rounded point with two elongate sensory areas just at tip. This species has been described from single mounted examples of the different stages discussed. The material was collected at Quirigua, Gua- temala, during March, 1928, and the spring of 1929, on Acacia sp. by Dr. Sally Hughes-Schrader. In addition, a few other specimens, mostly of the immature stages, have been available for examination. The types are in the U. S. National Collection of Coccidae. It may be of added interest from a taxonomic viewpoint to note that Dr. Hughes-Schrader in her letter discussing this species remarks on the fact that her investigations have shown that its cytological and histological organization very closely resembles the condition in Icerya and is conse- quently sharply differentiated from the representatives of the tribe Llaveiini which she has examined. EXPLANATION OF PLATE. Fig. 1.—Adult female, optical section, X 7.5; 2, same, a itenna, X 60; 3, same, derm disk pores, X 1500; 4, same, types of setae, X 650; 5, same, hair, X 650; 6, same, spines, X 650; 7, adult male, head dorsal, X 60; 8, adult female, thoracic and abdominal spiracles, X 60; 9, same, abdominal spiracles, X 120; 10, same, one-half of ventral cicatrices, X.18; 11, larva, dorsal to right, X 60; 12, adult male, penis sheath, X 120; 13, larva, beak, X 115; 14, adult female. claw, X 330; 15, same, leg, X 50; 16, adult male, halter, X 120. (Drawings by Miss Louise M. Russell.) Vol. 43, pp. 21-54 March 12, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHIN oe On: SEVENTH SUPPLEMENT TO THE FLORA OF THE == DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND VICINITY. BY W. L. McATEHE. This supplement contains not only a list of additions to knowledge of the Flora of the District of Columbia and Vicinity since the last summary in Volume 21 of Contributions from the United States National Herbarium, but also the results of a recheck of all records in what may be termed the regular series of publications on our flora beginning with that of Ward in 1881 and extending to that of Hitchcock and Standley (and 20 collaborators) in 1919. This series comprises the following: Ward, Lester F., Guide to The Flora of Washington and Vicinity, Bul. 22, U. S. National Museum, 1881, 264 pp., 1 map. Ward, Lester F. List of plants added to the flora of Wash- ington from April 1, 1882, to April 1, 1884. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington 2: 84-87. 1884. Knowlton, Frank H. Additions to the flora of Washington and vicinity from April 1, 1884, to April 1, 1886. Op. cit. 3: 106-132. 1886. Holm, Theodor. Third list of additions to the flora of Wash- ington, D. C. Op. cit. 7: 105-182. 1892. Holm, Theodor. Fourth list of additions to the flora of Washington, D. C. Op. cit. 10: 29-43. 1896. Holm, Theodor. Fifth list of additions to the flora of Wash- ington, D. C. Op. eit. 14: 7-22. 1901. Steele, Edward 8S. Sixth list of additions to the flora of Washington, D. C., and vicinity. With Descriptions of New Species and Varieties by Edward L. Greene, Alvah A. Eaton, and the author. Op. cit. 14: 47-86. 1901. 1Literature reviewed through 1928, local records through 1929. 8—Proc. Biou. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (21) 22 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Hitchcock, A. 8. and Paul C. Standley (with the Assistance of the Botanists of Washington). Flora of the District of Columbia and Vicinity, Contr. U. 8. National Her- barium, 21: 1919. 329 pp., 42 pls. In the following pages the publications cited are referred to as 1881 Flora, Suppl. 1, Suppl. 2, etc., and 1919 Flora. In each case the number at the left refers to the pertinent page in the 1919 Flora. The present, or seventh supplement, consists of five sections, namely: I. Species, hybrids, and varieties hitherto unrecorded in the regular series of publications on the District of Columbia Flora. II. Species and varieties previously recorded in the regular series of publications on District of Columbia plants, but not accounted for in the 1919 Flora. III. Additional records for species, hybrids and varieties cited from only a single locality in the 1919 Flora. IV. Miscellaneous additions and corrections to the 1919 Flora. V. Records of certain transplanting operations. Contribution of notes and other assistance in the preparation of this supplement is gratefully acknowledged from the follow- ing persons in particular, as well as from others mentioned in connection with individual notes: Mr. J. E. Benedict, Jr., Dr. S. F. Blake, Dr. A. K. Fisher, Mr. O. M. Freeman, Mr. Alvah Godding, Dr. Robert F. Griggs, Dr. Theo. Holm, Mr. E. P. Killip, Dr. Wm. A. Maxon, and Dr. Edgar T. Wherry. The help of Drs. Blake and Wherry in going over two drafts of the manuscript has been especially appreciated. Ve Species, hybrids, and varieties, hitherto unrecorded in the regular series of publications on the District of Columbia Flora. This section totals 91 species, 53 varieties, and 1 hybrid. 52. Botrychium obliquum var. elongatum Gilbert and Haberer. Recorded from D. C. by Robinson and Fernald (Gray’s Man., 7th Ed., 1908, p. 49). 55. 55. 56. 57. 61. 66. CP 80. 80. 82. 84. 84. 90. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 23 Adiantum capillus-veneris L. Escaped at Woodside, Md. (Benedict, Amer. Fern Journ. 14, 1924, p. 21); station since destroyed, J. E. Benedict, Jr. Polystichum acrostichoides var. schweinitzii (Beck) Small. Fairly common, EH. T. Wherry. Athyrium angustum (Willd.) Presl. Escaped from cultivation, Chevy Chase, D. C., 1925, Edgar T. Wherry. Filix fragilis (L.) Underwood. Two varieties occur, one with short erect rootstocks which grows on rocks and another with long horizontal rootstocks found in alluvial soil. The former is var. mackayi Lawson and the latter has not as yet received a name. Picea abies (L.) Karst. The Norway Spruce has escaped locally, Alvah Godding. Elodea occidentalis Pursh. Recorded from Washington, D. C., June 11, 1882, L. F. Ward, in Harold St. John’s revision of this group according to which EL. cana- densis Michx. (Anacharis canadensis of the Flora) seems not to occur in our region. Andropogon scoparius var. villosissimus Kearney. Deanwood, D. C. (F. Tracy Hubbard, Rhodora, 19, p. 102, June, 1917); Hitchcock does not give this form nomenclatorial recognition. Echinochloa crusgalli var. mitis Pursh. Echinochloa crusgalli var. edulis Hitche. Recorded from D. C. by Hitchcock (Contr. U. 8S. Nat. Herb. 22, Pt. 3, 1920, pp. 145, 147, respectively). Chaetochloa ambigua (Guss.) Scribn. and Merr. Recorded from D. C. by Hitchcock (Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb., 22, Pt. 3, 1920, p. 186). Aristida curtissii (A. Gray) Nash. Near Chillum, Md., Sept. 24, 1926, S. F. Blake. Agrostis schweinitzii Trin. Low shady woods near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm (det. C. V. Piper); regarded by Hitchcock as a synonym of A. perennans (Walt.) Tuckerm. Sphenopholis obtusata var. pubescens (Scribn. and Merr.) Scribn. Riverdale, Md., June 26, 1920, S. F. Blake. Bromus hordeaceus var. leptostachys (Pers.) Beck. Recorded from D. C. by Robinson and Fernald (Gray’s Man., 24 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 7th Ed., 1908, p. 163); regarded by Hitchcock as a synonym of B. racemosus L. 90. Lolium multiflorum Lam. Old field near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm. 91. Elymus. In a revision of ‘‘The Missouri Species of Elymus” (Amer. Midl. Nat., 10, Nos. 2-3, March-May, 1926, pp. 49-88) B. F. Bush cites specimens from our region and makes changes affecting the names of our species. JL. striatus var. arkansanus (Scribn. and Ball) Hitche. of the Flora is raised to specific rank. E. glaucifolius Muhl. takes the place of HE. canadensis L. of the Flora and is recorded from Mary- land and the District of Columbia; its variety EH. g. var. crescendus Ramaley is recorded from the D. C.; E. virginicus var. intermedius Vasey replaces EF. virginicus hirsutiglumis (Scribn.) Hitche. of the Flora, and EF. virginicus var. glabrifolius Vasey is recorded from the District of Columbia. The D. C. list is amended from 4 species and 2 varieties to 5 species and 3 varieties. 92. Phyllostachys mitis Riv. This small bamboo is escaped locally, for instance along Chain Bridge Road near Cherrydale, Va., and also near Fort C. F. Smith, Va., W. L. MeAtee; identified by Nees Chase. 96. Eleocharis engelmanni var. detonsa Gray. Bradley Hills, Md., July 6, 1924, S. F. Blake. 101. Carex caryophyllea Lat. Recorded from D. C. by Britton and Brown (Illus. Flora, 2nd Ed., 1, 1913, p. 391); and by Robinson and Fernald (Gray’s Man., 7th Ed., 1908, p. 237). 108. Carex plana Mackenzie. Camp Humphreys, Va., June 2, 1929, S. F. Blake. Determined by K. K. Mackenzie. 109. Carex mirabilis Dewey. Chain Bridge Flats, June 1, 1919, F. W. Hunnewell. 109. Carex tribuloides var. sangamonensis Clokey. Chillum, Md., June 21, 1926, S. F. Blake; determined by K. K. Mackenzie. 111. Carex plantaginea Lam. Fairfax County, Va., April 14, 1918, F. W. Hunnewell. 114. Wolffiella floridana (J. D. Smith) C. H. Thomps. Shaw’s Lily Ponds, Kenilworth, D. C., Aug. 4, 5, 1929, S. F. Blake. 115. Eriocaulon parkeri Robinson. Mouth of Cameron Run, near New Alexandria, Va., Aug. 13, 1910 (F. W. Pennell, Torreya, 2, No. 6, June, 1911, p. 13). This is the 118. 119. 120. 122. 124. 124. 125. 126. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 25 basis of the Washington, D. C., record by Britton and Brown (Illus. Flora, 2nd Ed., I, 1913, p. 454), copied by E. J. Grimes (Rhodora, 24, p. 149, Aug., 1922). The identification originally by J. K. Small is confirmed by Bayard Long who has recently examined the material at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia. Previously Eriocaulon parkert has been recorded only from scattered stations in eastern estuaries. It has been collected in our region also from the shore of Accotink Bay, Camp Humphrey, Va., Oct. 12, 1924, and also at the original locality, Oct. 20, 1929, by S. F. Blake. Juncus tenuis var. anthelatus Wiegand. Near Cheverly, Md., July 9, 1926, S. F. Blake; determined by K. M. Wiegand. Juncus debilis Gray. Low wet ground in woods near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm (de- termined by F. V. Coville and 8S. F. Blake). Tulipa sylvestris L. Brookville Road, 1 mile southwest of Forest Glen, Md., April, 1929, G. W. Morey. Yucca filamentosa L. Established on interurban right of way, Orchard View Station, Md., where the Baltimore Boulevard crosses the tracks. F. M. Uhler, W. L. McAtee. Polygenatum hebetifolium (Gates) Bush. Originally described as a variety of P. biflorum (Walt) Ell., in part from local material (Gates, R. R., Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 44, No. 3, March, 1917, p. 122), is recorded from Chevy Chase, D. C., and Sligo, Md., by B. F. Bush (Amer. Midland Nat., 10, Nos. 11-12, Sept.-Nov., 1927, p. 392). Polygonatum commutatum var. virginicum (Greene) Gates. Dalecarlia Reservoir, D. C.; May 23, 1905, Joseph H. Painter (Gates, loc. cit. p. 124). “‘Mr. Hunnewell * * * showed a Polygo- natum from Washington, D. C., and Virginia, which * * * has been described as P. commutatum (R. & 8.) Dietr. var. virginicum (Greene) Gates’”’ (Notice No. 14, New Engl. Bot. Club., p. [3], Sept., 1925). This would place as a variety of P. giganteum of the Flora. Smilax glauca var. leurophylla Blake. Local material is used as part of the basis for this variety which differs from the typical and more southern variety by having the leaves neither pulverulent nor papillose beneath. (Blake, 8S. F., Rhodora, 20, p. 80, April, 1918.) Iris virginica L. This species considered separable from I. versicolor L. by Edgar Anderson is recorded by him from Alexander Id., D. C., May 15, 1915, Van Eseltine (Ann. Mo. Bot. Gard. 15, No. 3, Sept., 1928, p. 256). 26 130. 131. 135. 135. 136. 136. 136. 145. 154. 155. 155. 156. 158. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Isotria affinis (Aust.) Rydb. North of Chevy Chase, J. Frank Schairer; English Corners, Be- thesda, Md., June 5, 1929, O. M. Freeman. Corallorrhiza odontorhiza forma flavida Wherry. This form was described (Journ. Wash. Acad. Sci., 17, 1927, p. 36) from a plant collected in 1924, by Mrs. Nellie C. Knappen in a ravine west of Pierce Mill. Populus balsamifera L. Recorded from banks of Potomac opposite Plummers Id., Md. (Sargent, C. S., Journ. Arn. Arb. 1, No. 1, July, 1919, p. 63). Mpyrica cerifera L. Paint Branch Bog No. 2, Md. I inspected this plant for several years before obtaining mature fruit that enabled positive identifi- cation. W. L. McAtee. Carya glabra var. hirsuta Ashe. “This tree is not uncommon on rocky wooded slopes along the Potomac River at Great Falls, Virginia.” (W. W. Ashe, Bul. Torrey Bot. Club., 46, p. 225, June, 1919). Carya glabra var. megacarpa Sargent. District of Columbia (C. 8. Sargent, Bot. Gaz. 66, p. 244, Sept., 1918). Carya ovalis Wang. var. odorata Sargent. District of Columbia (C. 8. Sargent, op. cit. p. 246). Polygonum aequale Lindman. Vacant lots in Anacostia, D. C., and on old roads near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm. A segregate from P. aviculare L. (Lindman, C. A. M., Svensk Bot. Tidschr. 6, 1912, pp. 673-696, Pls. 23-26). Dianthus barbatus L. Collected along roadside, Suitland, Md., May 26, 1918, in flower; the rootstock, 18 inches in length, showed the plant had been es- tablished some years; several plants were seen. W. L. McAtee. Nymphaea americana (Prov.) Miller and Standley. Accotink, Va., Edgar T. Wherry. Nelumbo lutea (Willd.) Pers. Accotink Bay, August, 1923, J. E. Benedict, Jr., and Edgar T. Wherry. Coptis trifolia (L.) Salisb. Ammendale, Md., Brother Arsene. Ranunculus delphinifolius Torr. In a pool between Widewater on the canal and the river, Robert Humphrey. 158. 161. 162. 165. 167. 170. 171. 171. 172. 172. 174. 174. 175. 175. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 27 Ranunculus parviflorus L. Weed in experimental chestnut orchard, Bell, Md., June 9, 1928. W. L. McAtee. Magnolia tripetala L. Well established in upper Rock Creek Park at several places; appears native but possibly escaped from old time plantings; bloomed well, 1926, Elmer Walter. Platystemon californicus Benth. Potomac Park, D. C., along railroad, April 15, 1921, O. M. Free- man. Alyssum alyssoides L. Lanham, Md., June, 1909 (C. F. Wheeler’s notes). Sophia pinnata (Walt.) Howell. Baltimore and Ohio belt railroad near District Line, Md.; Great Falls, Va., Mrs. O. M. Freeman. Reseda lutea L. Abundant in old fields in the vicinity of Arundel, Md., Wild Flower Preservation Society, July 4, 1928. Philadelphus coronarius L. Escaped in woods near Potomac, Md., August 138, 1920, O. M. Freeman. Heuchera pubescens Pursh. Rich woods above Great Falls, Va., June, 1917, Titus Ulke (det. EK. P. Killip). Saxifraga pennsylvanica L. Pinehurst, 1920, C. E. Waters. Hydrangea arborescens var. oblonga T. and G. Recorded from the District of Columbia by Harold St. John (Rho- dora, 23, p. 207, Sept., 1921). Spiraea alba Du Roi. Dunn-Loring, Va., Aug., 1922; two miles northwest of Beane, Md., Aug., 1927, O. M. Freeman. Rosa carolina var. glandulosa Crepin. Takoma Park, D. C. (Alfred Rehder, Journ. Arn. Arb., 3, No. 1, July, 1921, p. 16. Rubus occidentalis forma pallidus (Bailey) Robinson. Beltsville, Md., Cherrydale, Va., W. L. McAtee. Rubus alleghaniensis Porter. Recorded from our region by Wm. H. Blanchard (Torreya, 7, No. 3, March, 1907, p. 56). 28 175. 175. 175. 176. 176. NZ Cle 178. 178. 178. 178. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Rubus frondosus Bigelow. About Washington as far as Fairfax, Va. (Blanchard, Bul. Torr. Bot. Club, 38, No. 9, Sept., 1911, p. 484-485). Blanchard described (Torreya, loc. cit.) in part from local material, R. philadelphicus, a form which he was later inclined to think should be recognized as a variety of R. frondosus. Rubus andrewsianus Blanchard. Recorded from our region in both of the foregoing references by Blanchard (Torreya, p. 56, Bul. Torr. Club, p. 488). Rubus phoenicolasius Maxim. Large colonies are established in several localities, one of which is near Lock No. 18, C. and O. Canal, Md., and another along roadside near Lyttonsville, Md., W. L. McAtee. Geum canadense var. grimesii Fernald and Weatherby. This variety was described in part from local material, Washington, D.C., June 18, 1896, E.S. Steele (M. L. Fernald and C. A. Weatherby, Rhodora, 24, p. 49, March, 1922). Drymocallis agrimonioides Pursh (Potentilla arguta Pursh). Recorded from D. C. by Robinson and Fernald (Gray’s Man., 7th Ed., 1908, p. 481); also by Small (Galley proof, new Manual Flora S. E. States). Malus platycarpa Rehd. var. hoopesii Rehd. Ballston, Va., April 23, 1929, S. F. Blake. Determined by A. Rehder. Amelanchier laevis Wiegand. Apparently should be given formal status in the list. Specimens of this species from here have been identified by its author, and W. W. Ashe implies its presence here by the expression ‘‘not common”’ (Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 46, p. 221, June, 1919). F. W. Hunnewell identi- fied it from Montgomery Co., Md., April 20, 1919. Alfred Rehder records also an A. canadensis x laevis hybrid from Alexandria, Va. (Journ. Arn. Arb., 2, No. 1, p. 46, July, 1920). Amelanchier canadensis var. intermedia Spach. Apparently the common form in Magnolia bogs (W. L. McAtee, Bul. 1, Biol. Soc. Wash., 1918, p. 79; W. W. Ashe, op. cit. pp. 221-222; K. M. Wiegand, Rhodora, 22, p. 148, September, 1920). Amelanchier sanguinea Pursh. ‘““On shaded rocks along the Potomac River, at Great Falls, Vir- ginia”’ (Ashe, op. cit., p. 222). Amelanchier sera Ashe. Described from material collected ‘“‘on rocky banks along the Potomac River, Fairfax County, Virginia, and Montgomery County, Maryland” (Ashe, op. cit., pp. 222-223). 178. 179. 179. 185. 186. 188. 190. 190. 192. 192. "195. 195. 195. 17 200. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 29 Amelanchier micropetala var. potomacensis Ashe. Described from “‘rocky banks along the Potomac River, Fairfax County, Virginia” (Ashe, op. cit., pp. 223-224). Crataegus apposita Sargent. Great Falls, Va. (W. W. Ashe, Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 46, p. 225, June, 1919). Crataegus smithii Sargent. Great Falls, Va. (Ashe, loc. cit.). Coronilla varia L. Compost heap, Arlington Farm, Va., June 16, 1928, W. L. McAtee. Meibomia sessilifolia Torr. St. Elmo, Va., August 18, 1921, O. M. Freeman. Lespedeza stuvei var. neglecta Britton. Oak Station near Dyke, Va., Oct. 21, 1924, S. F. Blake. Strophostyles helvola var. missouriensis (S. Wats.) Britt. Swamps, New Alexandria, Va., 1924, Edgar T. Wherry. This form is given specific rank by Britton and Brown (Illus. Flora, 2nd wd il 1913, p.423). Recorded from D. C. by Robinson and Fernald (Gray’s Man. 7th Ed., 1908, p. 529). Tropaeolum majus L. The common nasturtium was collected in flower in the bottom of a ditch, far from any house, at Dyke, Va., July 4, 1910, W. L. McAtee. Geranium bicknellii Britton. Arlington Farm, Va., May 12, 1903 (C. F. Wheeler’s notes). Xanthoxalis corniculata var. langloisii Small. Banks of Potomac, District of Columbia, F. Peck (K. M. Wiegand, Rhodora, 27, p. 121, July, 1925). Croton monanthogynus Michx. A waif near Chevy Chase, D. C., 1925, Edgar T. Wherry. Croton capitatus Michx. Linden, Md., Oct. 14, 1928, J. E. Benedict, Jr. Acalypha digyneia Raf. Bethesda, Md., Sept. 10, 1899, E. S. Steele (C. A. Weatherby, Rhodora, 29, p. 199, Oct., 1927). Tithymalus peplus (L.) Hill. Scott’s Id., Md., Oct., 1922, E. A. Preble. Acer rubrum var. tridens Wood. Hyattsville, Md., July 12, 1926, Paul C. Standley and S. F. Blake. 30 201. 202. 202. 202. 203. 205. 205. 207. 208. 210. 211. 211. 211. 211. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Impatiens balsamina L. Spontaneous in my yard, formerly woodland, for years; Maywood, Va., W. L. McAtee. Tilia michauxii Nutt. “Along the Potomac River from above Great Falls to below Marshall Hall, Va.” (W. W. Ashe, Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 46, p. 225, June, 1919.) Tilia neglecta Spach. “Growing with the preceding but in greater abundance.” (Ashe, op. cit., p. 226.) Valley of Potomac River (C. 8. Sargent, Bot. Gaz. 66, p. 495, Dec., 1918). Althaea rosea Cav. Rough land near seawall, West Potomac Park, July 15, 1928, W. L. McAtee. Napaea dioica L. Below Great Falls, Va., Aug. 21, 1917, W. L. McAtee. Hypericum virgatum Lam. One mile southeast of Laurel, 1922, Edgar T. Wherry. Elatine minima Nutt. Alexandria, Va., A. H. Curtiss (M. L. Fernald, Rhodora, 19, p. 15, Jan., 1917). Viola chinensis L. (V. lancifolia Pollard.) Recorded as spontaneous in botanical gardens, D. C., by Britton and Brown (Illus. Flora, 2nd Ed., 2, 1918, p. 558). Viola incognita Brainerd. Kensington, Md., 1926, R. G. Cogswell. Viola hirsutula x papilionacea. This hybrid is recorded from the District of Columbia region by Ezra Brainerd (Bul. 224, Vt. Agr. Exp. Sta., p. 169, Dec., 1921). Opuntia pollardi Britton and Rose. The plants near Bowie and elsewhere east of Washington appear to represent this species, Edgar T. Wherry. Opuntia calcicola Wherry. Banks of Potomac, south of Poolesville, Md., and possibly nearer Washington, Edgar T. Wherry (Journ. Wash. Acad. Sci., 16, 1926, p. 13). Elaeagnus multiflora Thunb. Edge of canal near Cabin John, Md., 1928, A. K. Fisher. Elaeagnus umbellata Thunb. Forest Glen, Md., April 28, 1929, J. E. Benedict, Jr. 217. 218. 218. 218. 218. 218. 218. 222. 223. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 31 Bupleurum rotundifolium L. At present a waif near Chevy Chase, D. C., Edgar T. Wherry. Osmorrhiza longistylis var. brachycoma Blake. Described in part from District of Columbia material, the type from Cabin John, Md. (8. F. Blake, Rhodora, 25, pp. 110-111, July, 1923). Osmorrhiza longistylis var. villicaulis Fernald. Common in our region (Blake, loc. cit.). The key on p. 217 requires revision as a result of these studies. Chaerophyllum procumbens var. shortii Torr. and Gr. Recorded by Coulter and Rose. (Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb., 7, No. 1, p. 59, Dec. 1900). Oenanthe phellandrum Lam. Collected June 10, 1897, near Washington Monument, by E. 8S. Steele (Coulter and Rose, Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb. 7, no. 1, Dec., 1900, p. 254). Oxypolis rigidior var. ambigua (Nutt.) Robinson. Recorded under the name longifolia Britton from various Magnolia Bogs. (McAtee, Bul. 1, Biol. Soc. Wash., 1918, pp. 80, 83.) Pimpinella saxifraga L. English Corners, Bethesda, Md., July 21, 1929, O. M. Freeman. Hypopitys insignita Bicknell. Occurs at several places east and northeast of Washington, among them, Riverdale, Ardwick, and Suitland, Edgar T. Wherry. This is probably the peculiar form referred to by Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 36). Azalea arborescens Pursh. Great Falls, Va. (W. W. Ashe, Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 47, p. 582, ’ Dec., 1920); Difficult Run, Va., 1924, Edgar T. Wherry. According 223. 223. 223. to Rehder our local form is var. richardson. Azalea atlantica Ashe. Takoma Park, May 11, 1900, T. A. Williams (Alfred Rehder, Publ. 9, Arn. Arb., p. 148, 1921). Azalea viscosa variety. Rhododendron viscosa forma rhodantha Rehder was described in part from local material Hyattsville, Md., May 31, 1915, E. 8S. Steele; Washington, D. C., June 15, 1909, W. W. Cooke (Rehder, op. cit. p. 160). Azalea viscosa variety. Rhododendron viscosa var., tomentosa (Dumont de Courset), Hyatts- ville, Md., June 27, F. H. Knowlton; June 4, 1904, H. D. House; Barcroft, Va., June 6, 1915, E. 8. Steele (Rehder, op. cit., p. 163). 32 223. 225. 225. 226. 228. 229. 230. 234. 235. 237. 242. 244. 250. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Azalea rosea Lois. Difficult Run, Va., May 16, 1920, E P. Killip, determined by Rehder. [Rehder treats all of the azaleas under the genus Rhodo- dendron.} Vaccinium vacillans var. crinitum Fernald. Lanham, Bladensburg, and Hyattsville, Md., S. F. Blake. Vaccinium pennsylvanicum Lam. A small colony on wooded hillside, Arundel, Md., Wild Flower Preservation Society, July 4, 1928. Anagallis arvensis var. caerulea (Schreb.) Ledeb. Abundant at Arundel, Md., Edgar T. Wherry. Fraxinus caroliniana Mill. “Along the Potomac River opposite Washington”? (W. W. Ashe, Bul. Torrey Bot. Club, 46, p. 226, June, 1919). Gentiana clausa Raf. Much of the Washington material included in G. andrewsii Griseb. in the 1919 Flora corresponds to this as redefined by Fernald (Rhodora, 19, 1917, p. 147). Trachelospermum difforme (Walt.) Gray. Meadow by rivcr, Washington, June 5, 1918, F. W. Hunnewell. Convolvulus japonicus Thunb. Recorded from D. C. by Britton and Brown (Illus. Flora, 2nd Ed., III, 1913, p. 46). Phlox subulata. Local plants are densely glandular on new growth and have the flowers chiefly white, corresponding in these respects with P. brittoniz Small, which probably should be ranked as a variety of P. subulaia, Edgar T. Wherry. Lappula lappula L. Railroad yard opposite Bureau of Printing and Engraving, Wash- ington, D. C., Grace G. Street. ; Agastache scrophulariaefolia (Willd.) Ktze. Boulder Bridge, Rock Creek Park, 1922, Edgar T. Wherry Monarda media Willd. Glenmont, Md. (north of Wheaton), 1926, Edgar T. Wherry. Chelone glabra var. ochroleuca Pennell and Wherry. Patuxent River (Wherry, Edgar T., Bartonia, 10, 12, Jan., 1929, p. 2). 250. 251. 252. 255. 255. 258. 258. 258. 264. 265. 267. 267. 267. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 33 Chelone obliqua L. Patuxent Swamp, near Marlboro, Md., 1924, J. E. Benedict, Jr., 1925, Edgar T. Wherry. This plant had been lost to science for 175 years until thus rediscovered. (See Bartonia, 10, 12, Jan., 1929, 10 2))e Ilysanthes dubia var. inundata Pennell. Recorded from along the Potomac River near Alexandria, Va., in connection with the original description. (Pennell, F. W., Torreya, 19, p. 149, Aug., 1919). Veronica anagallis-aquatica L. Muddy shore of Potomac, July 13, 1918, F. W. Hunnewell. Seticapsella cleistogama (A. Gray) Barnhart. Suitland, Md., Edgar T. Wherry. Stomoisia juncea (Vahl.) Barnhart. Suitland bog, Aug. 18, 1921, O. M. Freeman. Galium mollugo L. Ammendale, Md., Sept. 8, 1916, Brother F. Hyacinth; large clump by roadside, ‘‘King St. extended,’’ near Alexandria line, Arlington Co., Va., May 14, 1929, S. F. Blake. Galium pilosum var. puncticulosum (Michx.) Torr. and Gray. Near Hyattsville, Md., July 29, 1920, 8. F. Blake. Galium verum L. Discovered at Arundel, Md., years ago by M. B. Waite; still to be found there; also one mile south of Laurel, 1922, Edgar T. Wherry. Picris echioides L. Chevy Chase, D. C., Sept. 23, 1928, P. L. Ricker. Prenanthes altissima L. Near Bethesda, Md., 1925, W. L. McAtee. Crepis japonica (L.) Benth. Well established on the estate of Dr. E. A. Merritt, one mile northwest of Chevy Chase Lake, Md., May 29, 1929, O. M. Freeman. Xanthium. A new treatment of the genus for the region, based on the revision of Millspaugh and Sherff, was published by McAtee and Metcalf in 1920 (Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. 33, pp. 177-179, Pl. 4). A key based on characters of the burs is given as well as illustrations of the latter. The revised list is: Xanthium spinosum L. Rare waif in various localities, not collected since 1896. 34 267. 267. 267. 267. 274. 275. 278. 281. 281. 281. 282. 282. 282. 284. 285. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Xanthium chinense Mill. Abundant in waste ground, cultivated fields and dumps. (X. americanum of the Flora.) Xanthium pennsylvanicum Wallr. Same status as last. (X. commune of the Flora in part.) Xanthium italicum Moretti. Frequent in waste ground. (X. commune of the Flora in part.) Xanthium speciosum Kearney. A single, but robust plant along Water St., near 33d. Eupatorium album var. subvenosum Gray. Recorded from Terra Cotta Swamp and other localities (McAtee, Bul. 1, Biol. Soc. Wash., 1918, p. 83). Eupatorium urticaefolium var. villicaule Fernald. Between Little Falls and Chain Bridge, Va., Sept. 21, 1920, S. F. Blake. Solidago juncea var. scabrella (Torr. and Gray) Gray. Clarendon, Va., 1928, 8S. F. Blake. Aster lateriflorus var. pendulus (Ait.) Burgess. Lanham, Md., 1912, W. R. Maxon (Wiegand, K. M., Rhodora, 30, p. 174, Sept., 1928). Aster vimineus var. dubius Wiegand. Described in part from local material, Hyattsville, Md., 1914, E. 8. Steele (Wiegand, K. M., Rhodora, 30, p. 171, Sept., 1928). Aster dumosus var. coridifolius (Michx.) Torr. and Gray. Takoma Park, D. C., 1897, T. A. Williams; Riverdale, Md., 1916, E. 8. Steele (Wiegand, K. M., Rhodora, 30, p. 166, Sept. 1928). Aster paniculatus var. simplex Willd. Mineshoe Id., Md., Edgar T. Wherry. Aster ericoides var. platyphyllus Torr. and Gray. Conduit Road, Md., about opposite Lock No. 14, Oct. 30, 1927 (Blake, 8. F., Rhodora, 30, p. 106, May, 1928). Erigeron pusillus Nutt. Landover, Md., Aug. 26, 1923, S. F. Blake. Gnaphalium obtusifolium var. helleri (Britton) Blake. Near Cabin John, Md., Oct. 26, 1923, S. F. Blake. Parthenium hysterophorus L. Twelfth St., near Ohio Ave., Washington, D. C., July 5, Aug. 2, 1929, W. A. Dayton and S. F. Blake. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 35 289. Bidens aristosa var. fritcheyi Fernald. Great Falls, Va., Cabin John, Md., E. 8. Steele; near Plummers Id., Md., Philip Dowell; West Potomac Park, 8. F. Blake (S. F. Blake). 289. Bidens aristosa var. mutica A. Gray. Glen Echo, Md., Sept. 17, 1920, S. F. Blake. 289. Bidens frondosa var. anomala Porter. Georgetown, D. C. (Sherff, E. E., Bot. Gaz. 4, p. 34, July, 1917); various localities in our region (Blake, S. F., Rhodora, 27, pp. 34-35, Feb., 1925). 290. Helenium tenuifolium Nutt. Abundant by roadside, Fort Humphreys near Accotink, Va., Oct. 12, 1924, S. F. Blake. 290. Matricaria chamomilla L. One plant in old vegetable garden, and a good-sized colony behind an unoccupied house, Clarendon, Va., 1928, 8. F. Blake. 292. Cirsium arvense var. integrifolium Wimm. and Grab. Near Cabin John, Md., June 26, 1926, S. F. Blake. II. Species and varieties previously recorded in the regular series of publi- cations on District of Columbia plants, but not accounted for in the 1919 Flora. Some of these may represent misidentifications and if any one has information to that effect it should be placed on record. This section totals 50 species and 36 varieties. 54. Pteridium latiusculum var. pseudocaudatum Clute. Kenilworth and Hyattsville, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 48). 59. Lycopodium annotinum L. Holmead Swamp, E. Foreman (Suppl. 2, p. 110); Henson’s Creek, G. W. Oliver (Suppl. 3, p. 131). Out of range, probably a misidentifi- cation. 59. Lycopodium alopecuroides L. Sphagnum Swamp, Henson’s Creek, G. W. Oliver (Suppl. 3, p. 131); later (1919) found by W. R. Maxon and P. C. Standley in Suitland Bog (Amer. Fern Journ. 10, 1920, p. 1); College Park, Md., 1924, E. T. Wherry; clay pit near Arlington Farm, Va., 1924, S. F. Blake. 60. Isoetes saccharata var. reticulata A. A. Eaton. Hunting Creek, Geo. Vasey, Frederick Coville, W. R. Maxon; Ana- costia River, E. 8. Steele. Described wholly from local material (Suppl. 6, p. 49); on the same page Eaton describes also var. palmeri, and notes that specimens collected at Mount Vernon by Coville are intermediate between it and the typical form. 36 60. V7. 80. 80. 82. 83. 85. 86. 90. oi 93. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Isoetes riparia Engelm. Hunting Creek, F. V. Coville (Suppl. 3, p. 132). Restricted by Gray’s Manual to a plant found on tidal shores of the Delaware River. The local record may be correct nevertheless; compare the similar range of Eriocaulon parkert. Panicum angustifolium Ell. The records of P. ramulosum Michx., Takoma, F. L. Scribner and T. H. Kearney, Jr. (Suppl. 4, p. 42); Terra Cotta, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 21) may belong here; if so it is an additional species for the list. Chaetochloa geniculata var. perennis Hall. Various localities, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 51). A variety not mentioned in the 1919 Flora but stated by Hitchcock in his later revision of the North American species (Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb., 22, Pt. 3, 1920, p. 172) to be unworthy along with other variants of the species, of nomenclatorial recognition. Cenchrus. According to Mrs. Chase’s 1920 revision (Contr. U. 8. Nat. Herb., 22, Pt. 1, pp. 69-74) C. tribuloides L. and C. pauciflorus Benth. both occur in our region. The records cited are: Mount Vernon, Tidestrom, for the former, and Deanwood, D. C., for the latter; pauczflorus occurs also at Black Pond, Va., Edgar T. Wherry, 1923. Aristida gracilis var. depauperata Gray. Bennings, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 51). Agrostis canina L. Vacant lots near B. & O. Depot (i. e. First and C Sts. N. W.), F. L. Scribner (Suppl. 2, p. 109). Danthonia sericea Nutt. West of Tenleytown, G. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 180); near High- land, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 20). Tridens flavus variety. Tricuspis sesleroides var. pallida Holm. described from Marshall Hall (Suppl. 5, p. 19) is said to be the typical form, and the name therefore is a straight synonym. Bromus maximus Desf. Dumping ground, D. C., E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 53). Elymus striatus var. villosus Gray. 1881 Flora (p. 184); evidently not considered worthy of recognition. Cyperus rivularis Kunth. Typical form and the variety eluta Clarke are equally common, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 17). 94. 94. 94. 94. 96. 96. 98. 99: 100. 110. 114. 119. 127. 133. 140. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 37 Cyperus fuscus var. viridescens Hoffm. Foot of Duke St., Alexandria, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 53). Cyperus cylindricus (Ell.) Britton. Kenilworth Swamp; Bennings, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 54). Cyperus strigosus var. robustior Kunth. Recorded by E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 53). Cyperus strigosus var. compositus Britton. Recorded by E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 53). Eleocharis intermedia (Muhl.) Schultes. Opposite Eighth Lock, Md., G. H. Hicks (Suppl. 4, p. 39); near Takoma; Marshall Hall, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 18). Eleocharis obtusa var. jejuna Fernald. Kenilworth, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 54). Fuirena squarrosa Michx. Holmead Swamp (1881 Flora, p. 125); Lydecker Basin, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 17); the 1919 Flora does not state whether these are con- sidered misidentifications; the plant’s range covers our region. Rynchospora fusca L. Doubtfully recorded in the Flora. Theo. Holm reports it from near Fort Myer (Suppl. 5, p. 18). Scleria reticularis var. pubescens Britton. Paint Branch Bogs; north of Kenilworth, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 5, p. 55). S. F. Blake also collected this form in the Powder Mill Bogs, Aug. 27, 1928. Carex communis var. wheeleri Bailey. Potomac Shore, Va., Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 41). Lemna gibba L. Old Canal, foot of Highteenth and Twentieth Sts., Lester F. Ward (Suppl. 3, p. 125). Out of range, probably a misidentification. Juncus brevicaudatus (Engelm.) Fernald. Bennings, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 58). Sisyrinchium angustifolium Mill. Conduit Road, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 59). Salix alba var. vitellina (L.) Koch. 1881 Flora (p. 116). Quercus lyrata Walt. Bottoms 3 miles below Laurel, Md., Robert Ridgway (Garden and Forest, 3, p. 129, March, 1890); near High Island, Geo. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 24). 38 141. 141. 144. 147. 149. 153. 155. 159. 169. 174. 175. 175. 176. 177. 179. 179. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Celtis occidentalis var. pumila Muhl. Various localities, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 60). Morus alba var. tatarica (L.) Loud. Near old observatory; Canal Road, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 60). Rumex brittanicus L. Rosslyn, Va., G. H. Hicks (Suppl. 4, p. 38); also recorded in 1881 Flora (p. 108). Polygonum dumetorum L. Recorded by Ward (1881 Flora, p. 108). Whether in the 1919 Flora it was intended to synonymize this name with scandens L. isnot madeclear. The two are treated as distinct by current manuals. Acnida tamariscina (Nutt.) Wood. Potomac Flats, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 61). Alsine stricta Michx. Great Falls, G. H. Hicks (Suppl. 5, p. 10). Castalia tuberosa Paine. Little Hunting Creek, W. Hunter (Suppl. 3, p. 107). Probably a misidentification. Thalictrum coriaceum (Britt.) Small. Common, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 63). This record of a mountain form probably is a misidentification. Cardamine parviflora var. arenicola Britton. Potomac Flats, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 64). Spiraea salicifolia L. The records under this name belong under S. latifolia of the 1919 Flora; S. saliczfolia is now known to be an Asiatic species. Rubus villosus var. humifusus Torr. and Gray. Various localities, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 64). Rubus trivialis Michx. Bennings, Hyattsville, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 64). Potentilla reptans L. Brightwood, E. L. Greene (Suppl. 5, p. 11). Agrimonia pubescens var. bicknellii Kearney. Linnaean Hill Road, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 65). Crataegus rotundifolia (Ehrh.) Borck. Riverdale, Tenleytown, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 66). Crataegus flava Ait. South Arlington, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 66). 180. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 39 Prunus instititia L. Roadside above Bennings (1881 Flora, p. 77). 180 Prunus armeniaca L. 186. 187. 195. 1993 200. 200. 213. 230. 234. 246. 246. 247. Found in several places growing without cultivation (1881 Flora, p. 76). Meibomia glabella Michx. Hillside above First Lock; Woodley Park, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 66). Meibomia lineata Michx. Suitland, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 66). Chamaesyce hirsuta (Torr.) Arthur. Great Falls and Marshall Hall, Md., Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 16). Tlex glabra Gray. Swamp beyond Silver Hill, G. W. Oliver (Suppl. 3, p. 110); between Camp Spring and Surrattsville, G. W. Oliver, W. T. Swingle, M. B. Waite (Suppl. 4, p. 33); again collected in this region (near Clinton) ‘in 1928 by Theo. Holm. Acer saccharum var. nigrum (Michx.) Britt. Island above Feeder Dam, F. V. Coville (Suppl. 3, p. 111). Acer pseudo-platanus L. Recorded as spontaneous along New-cut Road by E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 69). Epilobium coloratum var. umbrosum Haussk. Bethesda, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 72). Apocynum androsaemifolium L. Besides the single locality given in the Flora for this species, not formally admitted to the list, are William Hunter’s record for Wood- lawn, Va. (Suppl. 2, p. 108); L. F. Ward and Theo. Holm’s for Cor- ecoran Woods (Suppl. 3, p. 118); and Theo. Holm’s for South Brook- land (Suppl. 4, p. 36). Convoluvulus sepium var. americanum Sims. Rosslyn, Va., Theo. Holm (Suppl. 3, p. 120); Bunker Hill Road, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 14). Lycopus europaeus L. Virginia shore above Aqueduct Bridge, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 77). Mentha rotundifolia L. Weed in Agricultural Grounds, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 77). Physalis philadelphica Lam. Woodley Park, Geo. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 121); opposite mouth 40 252. 265. 267. | 274. 274, 275. 275. 275. 278. 278. 280. 281. 281. 281. 281. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. of Cabin John’s Run, G. F. Hicks (Holm. Suppl. 4, p. 37). This may be subglabrata MacKenzie and Bush. Veronica agrestis L. Accotink, Wm. Hunter (Suppl. 3, p. 121); Catholic University, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 15). Sonchus arvensis L. Brookland, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 14). Hieracium marianum Willd. Opposite south end of Analostan Island, E. 8. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 117); Virginia above Aqueduct Bridge, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 80). Eupatorium purpureum var. amoenum Pursh. Rock Creek, F. H. Knowlton (Suppl. 2, p. 107). Eupatorium perfoliatum var. truncatum Gray. Woodley Park, E. S. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 114). Eupatorium semiserratum DC. Great Falls, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 35). Eupatorium aromaticum var. melissoides Gray. Woodley Park, E. S. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 114). Laciniaria graminifolia var. dubia Gray. (1881 Flora, p. $6); recorded under the name pilosa Britton from various Magnolia Bogs (McAtee, W. L., Bul. 1, Biol. Soc. Wash., 1918, p. 83). Solidago altissima var. procera Ait. Spout Run, E. 8. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 114); Bethesda, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 83). Solidago juncea var. ramosa Porter and Britton. Glen Echo Railroad, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 83). Aster azureus Lindl. Terra Cotta, E. S. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 115). Aster lucidulus (A. Gray) Wiegand. Terra Cotta, H. W. Henshaw (Suppl. 3, p. 115); abundant along Potomac River; a good species near A. puniceus; runs to A. laevis in the local key, Edgar T. Wherry. Aster puniceus var. firmus Nees. Brick Haven; foot of First St., E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 84). Aster laevis var. cyaneus Gray. 1881 Flora (p. 88). Aster novi-belgii var. elodes T. and G. Common, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 84). McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 41 281. Aster salicifolius Ait. Various localities (1881 Flora, p. 88; E. S. Steele, Suppl. 6, p. 84). 282. Aster paniculatus var. acutidens Burgess. Potomac Flats, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 84). 282. Aster ericoides var. villosus Torr. and Gray. Woodley Park, Lester F. Ward (Suppl. 1, p. 85); Lobelia Run, Les- ter F. Ward (Suppl. 2, p. 107). 282. Doellingeria umbellatus var. latifolius Gray. Recorded (as var. humilis Willd.) at Terra Cotta, Bennings, etc., E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 84). 285. Polymnia canadensis var. radiata Gray. Glen Echo, E. 8S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 85). 285. Heliopsis scabra Dunal. Spout Run, E. 8. Burgess (Suppl. 3, p. 116). 287. Helianthus microcephalus T. and G. Cowden, Va., E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 85). 287. Helianthus hirsutus Raf. E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 85). 290. Tanacetum vulgare var. crispum L. Brightwood, Great Falls, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 86). 292. Cirsium pumilum (Nutt.) Spreng. Woodley Park, Geo. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 117). III. Additional records for species, hybrids, and varieties cited from only a single locality in the 1919 Flora. This section totals 65 species, 1 hybrid, and 2 varieties. 56. Polypodium polypodioides (L.) Hitch. Black Pond, Va., 1926, H. 8. Barber. 58. Dryopteris clintoniana (D. C. Eaton) Dowell. Broad Branch Valley, Rock Creek Park, 1924, Edgar T. Wherry; Paint Branch, Md., 1925, J. E. Benedict, Jr. 58. Dryopteris goldiana x marginalis Dowell. Rock Creek Bridge, D. C., 1925, Miss J. J. Brainerd. 77. Panicum werneri Scribn. Rock Creek Park, D. C., June 23, 1918, S. F. Blake. 78. Panicum spretum Schult. Hyattsville; Terra Cotta, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 21). 42 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 79. Panicum addisoni Nash. Suitland, E. S. Steele (Hitchcock and Chase, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb., 15, 1910, p. 244). 82. Muhlenbergia schreberi var. palustris Scribn. Beaver Dam Branch, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 52); Terra Cotta Swamp, Theo. Holm. 84. Sphenopholis obtusata (Michx.) Scribn. North Brookland, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 41); Reform School, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 19); Clarendon and Ballston, Va., Great Falls, Md., 1928, 8. F. Blake. 88. Panicularia obtusa (Muhl.) Kuntze. Surattsville, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 20). 91. Hordeum pusillum Nutt. South Washington, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 53). 94. Cyperus torreyi Britton. Swamp near Riverdale, and low woods near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm. 94. Cyperus retrofractus (L.) Torr. Along the Canal Road, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 3, p. 128); South Brook- land, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 39). 95. Kyllinga pumila Micnx. Listed in the Flora only from the now extinct Holmead Swamp; occurs in various Magnolia Bogs, W. L. McAtee; Marshall Hall, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 17). 96. Eleocharis olivacea Torr. Holmead Swamp being obliterated, E. 8. Steele’s record of this plant at one mile north of Berwyn can be cited as additional to the only other mentioned in the Flora (Suppl. 6, p. 54); has been collected also at Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm. 99. Rynchospora axillaris (Lam.) Britt. Swamps around Surattsville (Clinton) and Silver Hill, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 39); various localities, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 18); oc- curred also in Holmead Swamp (Suppl. 3, p. 128). 100. Scleria pauciflora Muhl. Flora states ‘‘frequent above the fall line.’”” Lakeland and one or two other localities given by E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 55) are below the fall line. 100. Scleria pauciflora var. caroliniana (Willd.) Wood. Near Hyattsville, and Cheverly, Md., 8. F. Blake. 108. Carex conjuncta Boott. High Island, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 40). 112. 113, 122. 129. 130. 135. 149. 155. 157. 166. 175. 176. 177. 178. 179. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicimity. 48 Carex typhina Michx. Hyattsville, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 19); near Clinton, Md., Theo. Holm. Carex bullata Schkuhr. Beaver Dam Branch, Reform School (1881 Flora, p. 130); Bright- wood, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 55). Muscari botryoides (L.) Mill. Sandy Landing, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 17). Habenaria cristata (Michx.) R. Br. College Park, 1924, Wild Flower Preservation Society. Ibidium plantagineum (Raf.) House. Black Pond, Va., 1922, Mrs. Nellie C. Knappen. Comptonia peregrina (L.) Coulter. A large colony grows on a hill along Bullneck Run, Va., E. A. Preble; another is near mouth of Scott’s Run, Va., O. M. Freeman; and the plant is abundant near Odenton, Md., W. L. McAtee. Iresine rhizomatosa Standley. Mineshoe Island, 1922, Clarence R. Shoemaker. Cabomba caroliniana A. Gray. Abundant in Susquehanna Run, Prince George’s County, Md., Sept. 29, 1923, S. F. Blake and W. W. Diehl. Anemone canadensis L. Hunting Creek Valley west of Alexandria, Va., 1926, Mrs. Flagg. Radicula hispida (Desv.) Britton. Chain Bridge Flats, Geo. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 108); Marshall Hall, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 9); Jackson City, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 64). Rubus odoratus L. Vicinity of National Observatory, Geo. B. Sudworth (Suppl. 3, p. 111). Geum hirsutum Muhl. Ammendale, 1924, Edgar T. Wherry; Soldiers’ Home, July 24, 1928, S. F. Blake. Malus coronaria (L.) Mill. South Brookland, Robert Ridgway (Suppl. 4, p. 34); and Ecking- ton, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 65). Aronia melanocarpa (Michx.) Britton. Flora states ‘“‘region of Four-mile Run; perhaps elsewhere.”’ This seems to be the most generally distributed of our choke-berries, W. L. McAtee. Crataegus monogyna Jacq. Corcoran Woods, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 3, p. 112). 44 184. 188. 189. 191. 195. 197: UY) 202. 212. 213. 214. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Lotus corniculatus L. Compost heap, Arlington Farm, Va., June 16, 1928, W. L. McAtee. Vicia hirsuta (L.) S. F. Gray. Kendall Green, Chickering (1881 Flora, p. 76); Potomac Flats; Anacostia, E. 8. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 67). Lathyrus myrtifolius Muhl. Marshes of the Potomac below Washington, as at New Alexandria and Accotink, Edgar T. Wherry. Geranium dissectum L. Waste land, Washington, D. C., June 6, 1913, S. F. Blake. Crotonopsis linearis Michx. Abundant by roadside near Bailey’s Crossroads, Fairfax Co., Va., Oct. 15, 1929, S. F. Blake. Poinsettia dentata (Michx.) Small. The Flora gives two localities which are so near together as to be virtually one; a remote one is railroad embankment at Brookland, D. C., Theo. Holm; the plant occurs also on Scott’s Island, Edgar T. Wherry. Schmaltzia crenata (Mill.) Greene. Only one station is given in the Flora; additional is a clump just below Great Falls, Va., 1922, Edgar T. Wherry; worth mentioning, though beyond local flora range, is the abundance of this plant where the highway crosses Goose Creek, Va., near its mouth, Aug. 9, 1924, W. L. McAtee. Ampelopsis arborea (L.) Rusby. Fort Washington, Md., 1927, Edgar T. Wherry. Lythrum salicaria L. West Potomac Park, in rough land near sea wall, July 15, 1928, W. L. McAtee. Ludwigia hirtella Raf. Only the extirpated Holmead Swamp is cited in the Flora, which states ‘“‘not collected recently.’’ It has been rediscovered, however, east of Laurel, 1924, Edgar T. Wherry. Trapa natans L. The Flora records this only from the now destroyed Fish Ponds and states “now extinct.’ It was common, however, below Marshall Hall, Md., June 28, 1927, C. C. Sperry; and has been collected near Susquehanna Run, Md., Sept. 29, 1923, S. F. Blake and W. W. Diehl; at Fox Ferry, D. C., and was abundant in bay at mouth of Oxon Run, Md., Sept. 16, 1924, 8. F. Blake, Harl V. Shannon, Edgar T. Wherry; also at Gunston Cove, H. 8. Barber, and south end of Highway Bridge, Va., June 19, 1929, O. M. Freeman. 215. 217. 218. 220. 220. 221. 223. 228. 229. 237. 238. 244, 252. 254, McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 45 Scandix pecten-veneris L. Seabrook, Md., Walter H. Evans (Suppl. 5, p. 11); Potomac Park, D. C., along railroad, April 15, 1921, O. M. Freeman. Eryngium aquaticum L. Abundant in the field between the Conduit Road and Stubblefield Fall, Robert F. Griggs. Heracleum lanatum Michx. Recorded from High Island in the Flora which reads “‘ probably ex- tinct now.” It still occurs at several places along the canal, Edgar T. Wherry; and F. W. Hunnewell collected it on Potomac Flats, June, 1919. Cornus alternifolia L. Virginia opposite Plummers Id., May 9, 1926, S. F. Blake; Soap- stone Quarry, Va., opposite Glen Echo, W. L. McAtee. Cornus femina Mill. Occoquan, Va., Nov. 18, 1929, Neil Hotchkiss. Pyrola elliptica Nutt. Garrett Park, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 4, p. 36). Rhododendron maximum L. There is a large colony on south bank of Bull Run just above Occo- quan Village, W. L. McAtee. Spigelia marylandica L. Seven Locks, Md., June 22, 1924, A. K. Fisher. Sabbatia campanulata (L.) Torr. Bog at Virginia Highlands, 1920, site destroyed, C. R. Shoemaker; besides the Falls Church station mentioned in the 1919 Flora, which has also been destroyed, there is another along the electric railroad west of West Falls Church, Edgar T. Wherry, 1927. Heliotropium europaeum L. Near Aqueduct Bridge, M. 8. Bebb (Suppl. 1, p. 86). Myosotis scorpioides L. Well established in brooks near Burnt Mills, 1927, Edgar T. Wherry. Monarda fistulosa L. Not uncommon in this region, especially in the Piedmont; Chevy Chase, 1923, Edgar T. Wherry; Cherrydale, Va., Conduit Road, Md., near Glen Echo, O. M. Freeman. Veronica chamaedrys L. Near Soldiers’ Home, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 15). Pedicularis lanceolata Michx. Fox Ferry Road, Md., May 17, 1928, W. L. McAtee. 46 264. 264. 275. 275. 289. 289. 290. 290. 291. 291. 291. 292. 293. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Apargia autumnalis (L.) Hoffm. Brookland, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 13). Hypochaeris radicata L. Clump in lawn, Clarendon, Va., 1928, S. F. Blake; also Bethesda, Md., Oct. 5, 1929, O. M. Freeman. Eupatorium serotinum Michx. One clump in wall of the tidal basin, Potomac Park, Washington, Nov. 1, 1927, S. F. Blake. Grindelia squarrosa (Pursh.) Dunal. Arlington Farm, Va., 1922, Lillian Cash; July 12, 1929, O. M. Freeman. Bidens connata Muhl. Accotink, W. Hunter (Suppl. 3, p. 116); Eckington and Brookland, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 18); Arlington and Bennings, E. S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 85). Galinsoga caracasana (DC) Schultz Bip. Between Chain Bridge and Lock No. 1; also Plummers Id., Md., S. F. Blake. Anthemis tinctoria L. Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md., Edgar T. Wherry. Artemisia vulgaris L. Hyattsville, Theo. Holm (Suppl. 5, p. 13). Mesadenia reniformis (Muhl.) Raf. The Flora gives Ward’s locality (High Id.) only and states ‘‘prob- ably now extinct.’”’ Knowlton later recorded it from Alexander Island, J. A. Allen (Suppl. 2, p. 180). Senecio vulgaris L. Uniontown, Lester F. Ward (Suppl. 1, p. 85); Potomac Flats, G. H. Hicks (Suppl. 4, p. 35). Senecio obovatus Muhl. Burnt Mills, Md., 1928, J. E. Benedict, Jr.; near Cabin John, Md., 1918, 1920, S. F. Blake. Cirsium muticum Michx. West Falls Church, near the interurban station, 1922, Edgar T. Wherry. Centaurea vochinensis Bernh. Good-sized colony in a vacant lot, Clarendon, Va., Aug. 13, 1928, S. F. Blake. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 47 IV. Miscellaneous additions and corrections to the 1919 Flora. 53. Lygodium palmatum (Bernh.) Swartz. The colony east of Riverdale is dwindling rapidly; this seems to be due not to vandalism but to neutralization of the acidity of the soil by lime and fertilizers washed down from adjoining cultivated fields. Edgar T. Wherry. 55. Camptosorus rhizophyllus (L.) Link. Stations within the District of Columbia itself are south wall of Oak Hill Cemetery, 1923, Emily W. Dinwiddie, and a boulder above Beach Drive, Upper Rock Creek Park, 1925, Mrs. Nellie C. Knappen. 55. Asplenium ebenoides R. R. Scott. A hybrid between Camptosorus rhizophyllus and Asplenium platy- neuron which should not have a name of its own apparently indicating specific rank, nor be given a formal place in the list. 56. Polypodium vulgare L. Most recent authors agree in treating the form in the Eastern United States as a species P. virginianum L. distinct from the European P. vulgare. (See especially Fernald, Rhodora, 24, 1922, p. 141.) 59. Lycopodium obscurum L. The more frequent variety is var. dendroideum (Michx.) Eaton; the typical variety has been found only near Kensington, Md., and Fort Humphreys, Va., Edgar T. Wherry. 61. Pinus strobus L. A fine grove including all stages from trees two feet in diameter to seedlings on the bank of the Potomac just above Broad Creek, Va., W. L. McAtee; a good stand of fine trees some 2 feet in diameter on Northwest Branch above Avenel, Robert F. Griggs. 61. Pinus taeda L. Sand Point, Va., W. L. McAtee. 61. Pinus echinata Mill. Next to P. virginiana this is the most common pine on the Piedmont Plateau; it is especially abundant near Chevy Chase, and the real estate subdivision, Pinehurst, owes its name to this species, here known as Foxtail Pine, Edgar T. Wherry. 79. Panicum scoparium Lam. 1919 Flora states ‘‘below the fall line”’; F. L. Scribner collected it at Great Falls (Suppl. 4, p. 42). 85. Gymnopogon ambiguus (Michx.) B.S. P. “‘Hast of the fall line” according to the 1919 Flora; Theo. Holm reports it at Great Falls, Va. 48 96. 110. 110. 111. 113. 118. 119) 119. 122. 122. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Eleocharis engelmanni Steud. 1919 Flora restricts it to “‘south of Washington”; Ward’s locality, Sandy Landing (Suppl. 1, p. 87) is Dickey’s Landing, a short distance below Great Falls; Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 54), gives also Howard Hill Reservoir. Carex gynandra Schwein. Reduced to a variety of C. crinita Lam. by C. F. Weatherby (Rho- dora, 25, p. 18, Feb., 1923). Carex aquatilus Wahl. According to G. P. Van Eseltine, who prepared the account of the Carices in the 1919 Flora, this entry in the list pertains to C. strictior MacKenzie. Carex davisii Schwein. and Torr. Theo. Holm remarks that while he may have collected this only once, as it is a perennial, he found it every time that he visited Great Falls and looked for it. Arisaema pusillum (Peck) Nash. This form has many distinctive features, thriving in much more acid soil than A. triphyllus, and blooming 2-3 weeks later. Edgar T. Wherry. Juncus marginats Rostk. K. K. MacKenzie (Bull. Torrey Club, vol. 56, p. 27-28, Jan., 1929) has given the new name Juncus cortaceus MacKenzie to the plant universally known as J. marginatus. Juncus canadensis J. Gay. MacKenzie (op. cit. pp. 29-31) revives the name Juncus longicau- datus (Engelm.) MacKenzie for the plant generally known as J. canadensis. Juncoides campesire (L.) Kuntze. Theo. Holm considers the local plant to be a species, Luzula multi- flora (Ehrh.) Lej., distinct from J. campestre and varieties (Rhodora, 28, pp. 133-138, 3 figs., August, 1926). He reports the form bulbosum as common in sandy soil near Clinton, Md. Erythronium albidum Nutt. 1919 Flora states ‘‘above Little Falls”; H. M. Smith’s station at Vis-a-vis Landing was opposite Three Sisters Id. (Suppl. 2, p. 131). Muscari racemosum (L.) Mill. Bayard Long says ‘Probably it is as frequent along the Potomac above the city of Washington as anywhere in America.”’ (Rhodora 24, p. 17, Jan., 1922.) 125. 129. 131. 132. 133. 135. 140. 141. 155. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 49 Narcissus biflorus Curtis. Near Kalorama Heights, E.S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 59). In the 1919 Flora the comment on this record is “‘probably a persistent garden bulb,” although Steele distinctly states ‘‘a genuine escape, as a good many plants were found scattered about a grassy field.”” Regardless of this particular case, denying Narcissus a formal place in the cata- logue of our flora seems cavalier treatment for a species that has persisted and spread without cultivation in some localities for nearly 150 years. A case in point is the site of Belvoir Mansion in the Fort Humphreys Reservation. Narcissus is abundant about the ruins of this celebrated colonial home which was burned in the 1780’s. Habenaria flava (L.) A. Gray. The plant occurring here is H. scutellata Nuttall which by some students is given specific rank, Edgar T. Wherry. Corallorrhiza wisteriana Conrad. A colony remote from the Potomac occurs in a ravine near Pierce Mill, Mrs. Nellie C. Knappen, 1924. Salix pentandra L. Persistent and spreading from an old osiery at Laurel. Specimen collected, May 20, 1928, by W. L. McAtee, identified by C. R. Ball. Salix wardi Bebb. Camillo Schneider lists this as S. longipes var. wardii (Journ. Arn. Arb. 1, No. 1, July, 1919, p. 28). This change affects also the combi- nation for the hybrid with S. nigra. Myrica carolinensis Mill. There are two colonies in dry woods in upper Rock Creek Park, Mrs. Nellie C. Knappen, 1925. Quercus macrocarpa Michx. The Ward (1881 Flora, p. 112) and Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 60) records for this tree do not seem adequately recognized by the statement that the species ‘‘is sometimes planted within our limits” (1919 Flora, p. 140). Ficus carica L. Should be given a regular place in the list; trees persist indefinitely here (e. g. one growing from beneath northeastern corner of Bureau of Entomology Building), and sometimes even bear fruit. Nymphaea. M. L. Fernald advocates Nymphozanthus as the correct generic name for the yellow pond lily. (Rhodora, 21, pp. 183-188, Oct., 1919). 50 155. 157. 158. 160. 165. 166. 167. 798 180. 188. 196. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Brasenia schreberi Gmel. Is abundant in the ponds at Wasena Park from which gravel for the filter beds was taken, Robert F. Griggs. Delphinium tricorne Michx. Far from being “‘almost extinct”’ this species occurs by the hundreds on islands in the upper Potomac, Edgar T. Wherry. Trautvetteria carolinensis (Walt.) Vail. Occurs on rock ledges just below Great Falls, Va., 1921, Edgar T. Wherry. Jeffersonia diphylla (L.) Pers. 1919 Flora restricts this to “‘Islands of the Potomac’’; it has been found elsewhere, as at mouth of Scott’s Run, Va., Theo. Holm (Suppl. ioe 2). Erysimum. The character given in key as to hairiness of Erysimum does not agree entirely with what is said of the plant on page 167. Radicula obtusa (Nutt.) Greene. “Localities not indicated’”’; Ward gave near Washington Monu- ment (1881 Flora, p. 64). Thlaspi arvense L. 1919 Flora states ‘‘not collected recently’’; it has, however, since been found on a railroad embankment in Washington, May 8, 1918, by F. W. Hunnewell, at Dyke, Va., May 18, 1921, W. L. McAtee, and Theo. Holm has collected it in old fields near Clinton, Md. Crataegus uniflora Muenchh. 1919 Flora restricts to ‘“‘woods along upper Potomac.” Silver Hill, G. W. Oliver, has been recorded (Holm, Suppl. 3, p. 112). Prunus cuneata Raf. An earlier name is P. susquehanae Willd. (M. L. Fernald, Rhodora, 25, p. 71, May, 1923). Vicia sativa L. 1919 Flora states ‘‘a species so far not found here.” Material collected along Fox Ferry Road, Md., May 17, 1928, by W. L. McAtee has been determined as V. sativa by Roland McKee. . Zanthoxylum americanum Mill. 1919 Flora ranks this only as an escape from cultivation; the plant is abundant on Mineshoe Island, however, where it can scarcely be other than native, C. R. Shoemaker. Tithymalopsis marylandica (Greene) Small. A hybrid between 7. cpecacuanhae and T. corollata (Theo. Holm, Amer. Midl. Nat., 9, pp. 149-175, July, 1924) which should, therefore, 204. 211. 212. 229. 236. 242. 243. 245. 245. 251. McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 51 not have a formal entry in the list of local plants. Homer D. House remarks that this form probably is that named Euphorbia uniflora by Rafinesque. House applies the generic name Agaloma to all our Tithymalopsis (Amer. Midl. Nat., 7, pp. 180-131, Sept., 1921). Ascyrum stans Michx. 1919 Flora gives it as a plant of dry sandy soil; it is at least equally characteristic of bogs. Opuntia. The correct name of the common prickly pear of our region is Opuntia compressa (Salisbury) Macbride, J. N. Rose. Rhexia mariana L. 1919 Flora records it from northeast of Washington. Accotink, W. Hunter (Suppl. 3, p. 112) and Marshall Hall, E.S. Steele (Suppl. 6, p. 11) are in other directions. . Neopieris. Rehder includes this under Xolisma (Journ. Arn. Arb. 5, No. 1, pp. 49-51, Jan., 1924). Bartonia paniculata (Michx.) Robinson. Occurs in moist woods, not bogs, near Dyke, Va., Edgar T. Wherry, 1918. Nyctelea ambigua (Nutt.) Standley. 1919 Flora restricts this to “‘above the fall line.”” E.S. Burgess’s station (Suppl. 3, p. 120), Poplar Point, part of what we now call Bolling Field, is in the Coastal Plain. Scutellaria serrata Andr. 1919 Flora restricts this to ‘‘above the fall line”; Theo. Holm reports it as rare near Clinton, Md. Dracocephalum denticulatum Ait. Grows in wet alluvial soil, and is so different in aspect from D. vir- ginianum of dry slopes, that it seems advisable to regard them as dis- tinct, Edgar T. Wherry. Koellia mutica (Michx.) Britton. Restricted to the Coastal Plain in the 1919 Flora but occurs also on the Piedmont as at Spring Hill, Va., and Glenmont, Md., Edgar T. Wherry. Cunila origanoides (L.) Britt. Homer D. House uses the generic name Mappia for this plant (Amer. Midl. Nat. 8, No. 2, March, 1922, pp. 61-64). Ilysanthes. The key characters in the 1919 Flora are transposed. According to F. W. Pennell (Torreya, 19, p. 149, Aug., 1919) the correct name 52 252. 254. 262. 262. 274. 277. 281. 283. 284. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. for I. attenuata (Muhl.) Small is I. inaequalis (Walt.) Pennell. J. dubia in the 1919 Flora is said to occur on ‘‘wet soil along the Po- tomac,” to which Theo. Holm adds wet places near Clinton, Md. Veronica scutellata L. 1919 Flora restricts this to “upper Potomac.’ Recorded from Marshall Hall and New Alexandria, Va., F. W. Pennell (Suppl. 6, p. 14). Bignonia radicans L. Two ‘‘strongly marked varieties’”’ were described but not named by Robert Ridgway (Garden and Forest, pp. 453-454, Nov., 1896). These were the orange- and red-flowered forms, respectively. A yellow-flowered form also occurs near Mount Vernon according to William Hunter. Valerianelia woodsiana (Torr. and Gray) Walp. 1919 Flora gives from High Island to Chain Bridge; E. P. Killip and Neil Hotchkiss collected it in Virginia opposite Plummers Island in May, 1925. Valerianella chenopodifolia (Pursh.) DC. Recorded only from above Chain Bridge; common along Fox Ferry Road, Md., May 17, 1928, W. L. McAtee. Eupatorium purpureum L. Later authorities seem to agree that the two forms of Hupatoriwm grouped under the name purpurewm in the 1919 Flora should be recognized as species, but differ as to the names to be applied to them. K. M. Wiegand uses the names FH. verticillatum Lamarck and E. purpureum L. (Rhodora, 22, pp. 64-68, April, 1920), and K. K. MacKenzie uses for them respectively H. purpureum and EH. macu- latum L. (Rhodora, 22, pp. 157-165, Oct., 1920). Solidago. The characters as to racemes for species 6 and 18 are transposed in the key, Edgar T. Wherry. Aster novae-angliae L. 1919 Flora restricts it to upper Potomac. There are numerous stations elsewhere; Potomac Flats has been published (Suppl. 3, p. 115; Suppl. 6, p. 84). Antennaria solitaria Rydb. Grows under Kalmia bushes near Bullneck Run, Va., Edgar T. Wherry, 1925. Gnaphalium uliginosum L. Flora states “not collected since 1884’; Holm in 1901 records it from Hyattsville and Marshall Hall (Suppl. 5, p. 18). McAtee—7th Supplement to Flora of D. C. and Vicinity. 53 287. Helianthus. In line 16 for ‘‘copiously’”’ read more or less, Edgar T. Wherry. 287. Helianthus angustifolius L. 1919 Flora states “‘northeast of Washington”; the plant occurs in most bogs, however; Holm reported it from near Fort Myer (Suppl. 5, p. 13), and W. L. McAtee has collected it in the bog adjoining cemetery in Alexandria, localities not ‘‘ northeast.” 288. Coreopsis tinctoria L. 1919 Flora states ‘‘reported by Ward as escaped in a few places but has not been collected recently.”’ It was also reported, however, by Steele 20 years later (Suppl. 5, p. 85), and collected by McAtee, July, 1904, so would seem to deserve a formal place in the list. 289. Bidens bidentoides (Nutt.) Britt. This entry of the 1919 Flora and of Supplement 5 (p. 13) is B. con- nata var. anomala Farwell. (S. F. Blake, Rhodora, 27, pp. 34-35, Feb., 1925.) 291. Senecio obovatus Muhl. The presence of this plant at Great Falls, Va., is confirmed by Edgar T. Wherry; there is a well developed colony on rocks right at the falls (1924). V. Records of certain transplanting operations. Confusion already has arisen because of the collecting of transplanted specimens by persons not knowing their origin, and it is considered de- sirable to place on record all that can be learned about such operations. Information additional to that here given will be appreciated. The most extensive transplantations into an apparently natural en- vironment, of which we are aware, are those made on the property of the Washington Biologists’ Field Club, Seven Locks, Md. The Club owns Plummer’s Island, and the adjacent mainland overlapping the island at both ends. Few plants have been introduced to Plummer’s Island itself, except in a small wild flower garden, those known to the writer being: Polypodium polypodiordes Epigaea repens Tsuga canadensis Gaultheria procumbens Ilex opaca Rhododendron maximum 54 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. On the Maryland shore nearby the following things have been trans- planted, and most of them are now growing. Information on this point is largely from Dr. A. K. Fisher, who has had most to do with the work. Lygodium palmatum Pellaea atropurpurea Pinus taeda Pinus pungens Tsuga canadensis Taxodium distichum Veratrum viride Tris cristata Tris verna Cypripedium acaule Comptomia peregrina Hicoria ovata Betula lenta Quercus macrocarpa Caltha palustris Magnolia virginiana Inquidambar styraciflua Aruncus sylvester Aronia melanocarpa Prunus virginiana Ilex opaca Ceanothus americanus; this formerly grew here naturally Vitis labrusca Viola pedata Aralia spinosa Cornus alternifolia Clethra alnifolia Epigaea repens Gaultherta procumbens Rhododendron maximum Dodecatheon meadia Mentha spicata Catalpa bignonioides Lonicera sempervirens Viburnum nudum The following species have been planted in the largest of the Powder- mill Bogs (No. 1). Schizea pusilla Abama americana Drosera flliformis Sarracenia purpurea Sarracenia flava Sarracenia drummondi In this connection it may be mentioned that William Hunter for years transplanted chiefly woody plants to the National Zoological Park, where it is not safe therefore to assume that all of the trees, shrubs, and climbers are indigenous. Vol. 43, pp. 55-64 March 12, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE ZS NIAN TSS BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHIN¢ LON aN NOTES ON SOME AMPHIBIANS IN WESTERN NORTH AMERICA. BY GEORGE S. MYERS. Definite information concerning the amphibians of Western North America is rather recent, not only along the lines of habits and of distribution but even of taxonomy. The work of Camp (1915-1917) established a fundamental systematic groundwork in those cases which most needed it, and with the publication of Storer’s Synopsis of the Amphibia of California in 1925 many life-histories and a great amount of distributional data became known for the first time. Slevin’s recent work, The Amphibians of Western North America, 1928, adds much to our knowledge of distribution. There are yet considerable gaps to be filled, however, and little apology seems necessary for the present notes. They are largely distributional and are based on the collections of the Natural History Museum at Stanford University which for a time ranked as the most complete on the Pacific Coast. They formed the basis for Van Denburgh’s earlier work on western reptiles and to a considerable extent supplied records for his and Slevin’s recent monographs. Much interesting material, however, has as yet never been identified or recorded and some of this is here included. A few records are based on field work the writer has been able to accomplish during the last two years. No material is recorded which does not ap- pear to add distributional or other data. Triturus torosus (Eschscholtz). A large number of metamorphosing water dogs, averaging slightly over 50 mm., were collected about the edges of Lagunita, on the campus, Stanford University, Santa Clara Co., Calif., July 26, 1928. They were 9—Proc. Biot. Soc. Wasu., Vou. 43, 1930. (55) 56 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. at the water’s edge, emerging, and a few under boards a few feet from the - edge. Next to Hyla regilla, this is the commonest amphibian of the San Francisco Bay region, and, as the Hylas are secretive most of the year, it is easily the most generally known. For notes on this species at Rancho del Oso, see under Dicamptodon. Ambystoma tigrinum californiense (Gray). The night of March 9, 1929, at Lagunita, Stanford Campus, in a drizzling rain, a single large male was seen hastily making for the water. He was a hundred yards from the edge when first observed, but as I was not prepared to follow out to any depth to observe his movements he was collected. The cloacal region was greatly swollen, and the animal evi- dently was in breeding condition. No other specimens were observed, in the water or out, although many may have been present in deeper water. This indicates either a belated individual or a later spawning than of Storer’s account. Possibly unusual rainfall conditions may have con- tributed. (See account under Ensatina eschscholizit.) We have other specimens of this salamander from Palo Alto and San Jose, Santa Clara Co., Calif. These California t2grinwm are rather different in appearance from Long Island examples that I have seen, but still more so from some of the large-spotted specimens from the Rockies. Ambystoma gracile (Baird). A fine specimen, 185 mm., from Chinook, Pacific Co., Washington, C. H. Gilbert. Ambystoma macrodactylum (Baird). Among several specimens from Pullman, Washington, March 31, 1894, J. O. Snyder, is one female with ripe eggs, indicating spawning time. Dicamptodon ensatus (Eschscholtz). One adult, 228 mm., from Albion, Mendocino Co., James McMurphy; one adult, 218 mm., from Rancho del Oso, Santa Cruz Co., March 28, 1922, Theodore J. Hoover; 8 gilled larvae, 189-245 mm., from Middle Creek, Siskiyou Co., July 30, 1921, J. O. Snyder and Blake Wilbur; 3 small larvae, 57 to 72 mm., Mt. Lassen, Hollensworth Flat near Shingletown, Shasta Co., June 20, 1900, KE. Hughes; all in California. The large larvae are of interest as throwing some light on the size at metamorphosis. As Storer has suggested, it is apparent that in this form the larvae attain almost or quite adult size before transforming. It ap- pears to be of advantage to such a large salamander to prolong its larval life, for it gains not only in protection from enemies but in escape from dessication, which is possible even in some parts of the redwood forests. One adult (No. 61) from Steven’s Creek Canyon, Santa Clara Co., Calif., is remarkable for its small size, 153 mm. On March 17, 1929, Mr. Merrill W. Brown and the writer proceeded to Rancho del Oso where we hunted salamanders with the kind permission of Myers—Notes on Some Amphibians in Western N. A. 57 its owner, Prof. Theodore J. Hoover. The ranch comprises the entire valley of Waddell Creek, a small stream flowing directly into the ocean at the northern end of Monterey Bay in Santa Cruz County. Except for a short distance at the mouth, the valley is in the redwood belt, kept con- tinually moist by the dense ocean fogs. Going a few miles up the creek we soon began to find salamanders. Triturus torosus was leaving the water by the hundreds and the animals, apparently of at least two-year classes (of 80 or 90 mm. and large adults), were seen everywhere crawling over the ground or found resting under logs. A number of Hnsatina eschscholizit, Aneides flavipunctatus and Batrachoseps attenuatus were taken. Towards the end of the afternoon a light rain began to fall. We stopped at a small branch stream and began turning over logs. Over a little spring, piled on the almost vertical incline of the wet canyon slope, were some long strips of redwood. Clambering up and turning these over I uncovered a large adult Dicamptodon. It was the first I had seen alive and its size, together with its strength when seized, will remain a lasting impression. In preserv- ative it measures 220 mm. Mr. Hoover tells me that Dicamptodon is rare, but that individuals are occasionally uncovered when clearing up rubbish in the woods. One such that he obtained is in the collection. He further states that the animal utters a noise or “‘bark”’ and says that he has had his attention called to specimens in this way. Another adult, taken under a board by the roadside along the Santa Cruz-Los Gatos road, 15 miles from Los Gatos and 5 miles from the Big Basin road, March 24, 1929, G. S. Myers, measures 210 mm. with injured tail. Batrachoseps attenuatus attenuatus (Eschscholtz). Numbers of these salamanders are to be found under boards or chips about Palo Alto or in the nearby hills wherever there is sufficient moisture. The largest that I have seen measures 140 mm., of which 85 mm. is tail; it was taken on the Stanford Campus by G. M. Kranzthor, March 29, 1929. Also from La Honda, San Mateo Co., March 9, 1929, M. W. Brown and G.S. Myers; Rancho del Oso, Santa Cruz Co., March 17, 1929, Brown and Myers; and Santa Cruz-Los Gatos road, 15 miles from Los Gatos, March 24, 1929, G. 8. Myers. The characteristic manner in which Batrachoseps curls up when dis- turbed reminds one forcibly of the similar habit of Hemidactylium and suggests that the close relationship assumed by older writers may have some basis in fact. Mr. Lionel A. Walford has very kindly turned over to me the following observations on the breeding habits of this species as observed by him at Berkeley in 1925. “When the first rains occur, usually in November or December, B. attenuatus comes to the surface for the mating season. I have observed during the winter months a pairing off of individuals, many such pairs being seen close together under rocks and boards. I have seen young as early as October. 58 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. “On January 24, 1925, I found some eggs about a foot below the surface of the ground under some dense foliage. There seemed to be no pocket or excavation for the reception of the eggs and they closely resembled the surrounding earth. They were in two groups close together, one of seven eggs and the other of twelve. The eggs were about five or six millimeters in diameter, and appeared round. On February seventh seven individuals were hatched. They broke the other eggs in hatching. Little was left of the broken eggs and it is possible these were eaten. The young were seventeen millimeters in length when hatched and were of the same general color and form as the adults. On March 25 they were 22 millimeters long.”’ Batrachoseps attenuatus leucopus (Dunn). One, 80 mm., from Dulzura, San Diego Co., California. This specimen, a male, exhibits swollen areas about the naso-labial grooves, but there appears to be no external manifestation of a glandular swelling in the men- tal region. Ensatina eschscholtzii Gray. On March 9, 1929, Brown and I hunted salamanders at La Honda. The winter rains had been light and none had fallen for a month until that morning. About 500 yards down the creek from the village we began turning over redwood chips and bark. In a half hour’s collecting we ob- tained nine Ensatinas and more than twice that many Batrachoseps. The steady drizzle had not yet much wet the ground beneath the big red- woods and it was rather dry under the chips. All of the Ensatinas were under flat chips or pieces of bark one or two feet long lying rather loosely on the forest floor. None were under deeply embedded slabs or logs. Two of the specimens were young of the year, under 40 mm., while of the seven adults, four were males and three females. All were taken in an area approximately 100 ft. square, this being apparently the one place in the immediate neighborhood where sufficient shelter was to be found. The upper surfaces of the specimens are of a slightly variable shade of deep burnt orange, this fading to bright orange on the lower parts of the cheeks, sides and tail. On the venter the color is slightly paler, the skin translucent, and the internal organs visible. The proximal half of each leg is of the same bright orange as the sides. The upper eyelids of some of the specimens have an orange infusion and on some there are indications or orange spots on the upper surface of the tail. The iris is black, but directly above the pupil it is suffused with minute metallic greenish-silvery specks. The young Ensatinas were more brilliant than the adults. The basal bright orange tone is less obscured above by dark chromatophores. In captivity the four males were distinctly more active than the females, especially when one attempted to handle them. The swollen region on each side of the snout and the consequent overhanging folds of the upper lip were very noticeable. In this species the naso-labial groove does not extend to the edge of the Myers—Notes on Some Amphibians in Western N. A. 59 lip, but bifurcates and sends a branch anteriorly and one posteriorly along the swollen part of the lip, these branches soon becoming obsolete. In the female the branches are much less distinct. Five adults taken at Rancho del Oso (see under Dicamptodon) were of a much paler color, being a pale dull brown above and pale yellowish orange beneath. The proximal parts of the legs were yellowish orange. The three young likewise showed none of the brilliant color of the La Honda specimens, resembling theadults. Adults takenin Big Basin, Santa Clara Co., March 24, 1929, and along the Santa Cruz-Los Gatos road, 15 miles from Los Gatos, on the same date, resembled the La Honda ones in colora- tion. An adult, 113 mm., Salem, Marion Co., Ore., January 29, 1921, C. D. Duncan, adds a locality. A color description of the young may be of interest. In the La Honda specimens the ground color is bright orange-red. The darker color of the dorsum and distal parts of legs is caused by small dark spots each covering one skin pit. The dots are always on the pits but not all pits are spotted, the dark thus being somewhat irregular. There are a few golden spots on the proximal lighter parts of the legs. There is a very sparse sprinkling of fine white dots over the back and sides. In the Rancho del Oso young the coloration is in every way similar except that the ground color is yellow and the dark of the upper surfaces is deeper, more dark pit-spots being present. Ensatina sierre Storer. A fine specimen, 130 mm., De Sabla Power House, Butte Co., 22 miles northeast of Chico, Calif., February 5, 1918, L. M. Edwards. The follow- ing are life color notes by Prof. J.O. Snyder. Body dark violet black; feet, ventral sides of limbs and under parts very pale; spots and blotches of body mars orange; proximal segments of legs with yellow infusion; sides of body with many minute spots of silvery white. Also five smaller specimens from Fyffe, Eldorado Co., Calif., May 13, 1898, Miss J. C. Nichols. These are interesting in that in three examples the spots are extremely reduced, but a few small scattered ones being present on the upper parts of the sides and on the tail. This brings up the question of possible intergradation with eschscholiziz and particularly recalls the specimen in the California Academy, also from Eldorado County, which entirely lacks spots and has been referred to eschscholtzii (Slevin, 1928, p. 62). With these facts in mind, and judging from preserved material, we might be justified in reducing sterre to subspecific rank. This does not, however, take into account the widely different life colors of the two forms. LH schscholéziz in life is burnt orange or dull brown above and light orange beneath, this subject to slight change with temperature, light, and moisture. Sverre, on the other hand, is described as blackish or violet black above with the spots orange and the limbs and underparts pale. In alcohol eschscholiziz darkens and our sierres from Fyffe are brown after many years preservation, but until it can be shown that there is a meeting place in the life colors of the two forms I think we had best 60 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. keep them distinct. VanDenburgh (1916, Proc. Calif. Acad. Sci., VI, p. 220) says the ground color of croceater (sierre) may vary ‘“‘from light brown to nearly black,” but whether this refers to preserved or to live animals is not plain. Dunn has recently described the form in the San Jacinto Mountains and southward as a distinct species, Ensatina klaubert (1929, Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., 74, Art. 25, p.1). That this form! is separated from croceater (sierre) by the southern extremity of the range of eschscholtzi seems at first sight to be clear, but it is not yet wholly certain that a spotted Ensatina does not occur in the San Bernardinos along with eschscholizii. I have examined a single klauberz in the California Academy; it appears blacker and more brilliant than croceater (sterre). Aneides ferreus Cope. A series of 34 specimens collected by J. O. Snyder and C. V. Burke at Union Bay, Bayne Island, British Colombia, May 16, 1906, ranges from 33 to 117 mm., and forms the bulk of the original lot from which the speci- mens from this locality in the California Academy and National Museum came. The adult coloration varies somewhat in tone but the mid-dorsal line is always somewhat obscured. The young have a pair of light areas on the snout and head to level of middle of eye, a light stripe on each side of the neck in the parotoid region, a light area on the upper proximal part of each hind leg, and a dorsal light stripe on the tail. Aneides flavipunctatus (Strauch). As stated under Dicamptodon, we hunted salamanders at Rancho del Oso on March 17, 1929. Three large adults of flavipunctatus, 126 to 152 mm., were obtained under logs and slabs, as well as two young, of 41 and 43 mm. The adults were totally black save for one or two small whitish spots on the legs. The young were spotted, resembling spotted adults from northern California. All adults south of San Francisco Bay seem to be unspotted. In the young the color appears blackish, somewhat pale beneath, with a fine peppering of tiny blue-white flecks, both above and below. Under the binocular it is seen that the skin is finely and evenly covered with small deep pits. The ground color is coal black, while between the pits there is a fine broken golden tracery, each group of radiating lines apparently repre- senting a single golden chromatophore. Over all is an irregular peppering of tiny blue-white spots, each but little larger than a skin pit. On the venter there is no golden tracery and the pits seem to become light, thus giving the lighter color to the under side. 1The present paper was written before Storer’s ‘‘ Notes on the genus Ensatina in Cali- fornia,” 1929, Univ. California Publ. Zo6l., 30, No. 16, pp. 448-452, had appeared. I have adopted his name serre for the Sierra form, agreeing with him in the application of the name croceater to the southern species. Storer’s records confirm the presence of spotted Ensatinas in the San Bernardinos, true croceater ranging from Ft. Tejon southward. Mr. Klauber has very kindly presented the Stanford Museum with one of the series of cro- ceater from Descanso from which the type of klaubert was taken. They were obtained by Joe Carter, April 1, 1929. Myers—Notes on Some Amphibians in Western N. A. 61 The three adults were kept alive for some time in a jar. One of the smaller received a deep wound in the back, apparently a bite inflicted by one of its fellows. This species is much more active and lizard-like than lugubris. The young, especially, in which the legs are proportionately longer than in adults, move in a quick manner that is startlingly lacertilian. In appearance the two young were very similar to the only young speci- men of Plethodon glutinosus which I ever saw. I found it under a log ona hill near Sussex (Deckertown), N. J., and it was of approximately the same size as these small Anezdes. Storer (Synop. Amphib. Calif., p. 122) states that the range of flavz- punctatus is in general inland from that of lugubris. Exactly the reverse is true south of San Francisco Bay. Here flavipunctatus is limited to the coastal redwood belt, while lugubris is generally common only interiorly, in the Santa Clara Valley and in the Inner Coast Range. Two adults from Murphy’s Creek, Santa Clara Co., March 31, 1898, W. K. Fisher; one in bad condition from Sherwoods, Mendocino Co., F. Stephens, both in California. Aneides lugubris lugubris (Van Denburgh). One specimen, 140 mm., Anno Nuevo Island, near northern end of Monterey Bay, J. O. Snyder, seems worth recording. It almost entirely lacks the yellow spots. Large specimens of this species when confined in vivaria for a period without food, frequently severely bite their fellows, particularly on the tails, apparently mistaking those members for worms. Scaphiopus hammondii Baird. A series of transforming larvae of this species from near Salinas, Monte- rey Co., California, May 5, 1922, isin the collection. A newly transformed_ toad measures 31 mm. from snout tip to vent. This is a considerable ex- tension of the range. Bufo canagicus canagicus (Pallas). Rana canagica Pallas, 1831, Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., III, p. 12.1 Bufo boreas Baird and Girard, 1852, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci., Phila., 6, p. 174. It appears that Pallas’s name must supplant that of Baird and Girard for the common toad of the Pacific Coast. Lindholm (1924, Copeia, No. 129, p. 46) has called attention to Pallas’s description of Rana canagica but he did not attempt an allocation of the name. The only two amphibians known from the region ascribed to Rana canagica are Rana cantabrigensis and Bufo boreas boreas. I present Pallas’s description: 1Zoographia Rosso-Asiatica, sistens Omnium Animalium in Extenso Imperio Rossico et adjacentibus maribus Observatorum—Recensionem, Domicilia, Mores et Descriptiones, Anatomen atque Icones Plurimorum. Auctore Petro Pallas—Volumen Tertium—Petro- poli—In officina Caes. Academiae Scientiarum Impress. MDCCCXI. Edit. MDCCCXXI. 62 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, “5. RANA canagica. “R. subverrucosa, supra virescens, linea dorsali alba, subtus pallida. “In insulis Aleuticis inter Camtschatcam et Americam, et in hujus Continentis parte a Rossis occupato observavit, et breviter sic descripsit p. m. D. Merk. “Descr. ,,Supra corpus virescens, linea alba a capite per dorsum. Sub- verrucosa, verrucis ochreo-pallidis, in juniore aetate rubescentibus, halone fuscido cinctis. Subtus pallida, subverrucosa.,, (Italics mine.) Holding in mind the date at which this work was done (before 1811) and the construction of the other descriptions of ‘‘Ranae”’ given by Pallas, there seems not a great deal of doubt regarding the application of the name. The parts of the description italicised seem to me to be referable only to Bufo boreas. Surely no one would refer to Rana cantabrigensis as in any way warty. Pallas even mentions the color of the warts, and those on the back of boreas are well described as “‘ochreo-pallidis.”’ Bufo boreas is recorded from the Prince William Sound region, which is considerably farther north than the Aleutians. There thus seems no reason why boreas as well as cantabrigensis should not occur on the Islands, Kanaga included. But it is also definitely stated that canagica inhabits the mainland and I see no reason for not restricting the type locality to the latter area. Whether or not the Alaskan frogs are subspecifically identical with what we have called B. boreas boreas from Oregon and Washington must be decided with more abundant material than that available to me. Among the numereus toads of this form in the Stanford Museum the following seem worth recording. One, Woronofski Island, near Wrangel, Alaska, June, 1900, collector not recorded. One, Beaver River near Beaver, Beaver Co., Utah. Slevin (1928, Occ. Pap. California Acad. Sci., XVI, p. 93) referred toads from Lake Tahoe to halophilus. Three large adults in our collection from Tahoe City, Lake Tahoe, June 27, 1911, Snyder and Richardson, are defi- nitely referable to canagicus (=boreas boreas). Bufo canagicus halophilus (Baird and Girard). The name of the common toad of California, following the change of the northern subspecies, must be as given. A single large female, 115 mm., taken at night by the writer at Lagunita, on the Stanford Campus, March 9, 1929, approaches the northern sub- species in several ways, firstly in size, secondly in the extreme roughness of the skin between warts, and thirdly in having a heavy fine black mottling between the larger color spots. Dr. T. I. Storer has examined this indi- vidual, however, and pronounces it an halophilus on the width of the hind foot. The example was seen at a distance to be different from the num- erous other toads in the water and was collected on this account. Bufo canorus Camp. On the afternoon of June 20, 1928, search was made in the vicinity of Peregoy Meadow (elevation 7,100 feet), Yosemite National Park, for this Myers—Notes on Some Amphibians in Western N. A. 63 toad. Although logs and various kinds of cover were thoroughly examined about the meadow, no adults were found. In small muddy holes in the wet meadow, however, innumerable tadpoles were found. The holes were not more than 6 or 8 inches in diameter and were almost filled with fine mud and vegetation. Several tadpoles were in each hole and the holes were so close as to suggest hoof tracks of a herd of cattle. Seepage water kept them filled. The water was very warm, but must have become rather cold at night. Two sizes of tadpoles were observed, the smaller of about 10 mm., the larger being mature tadpoles of 28 or 30 mm. Some of the latter transformed that night, the tiny toadlets measuring 10 mm. Tadpoles of the smaller size were also observed on the same day at the first small meadow across the ridge from Chinquapin, on the Glacier Point Road, in a shallow place in a little rivulet which crosses the road. Search at Tamarack Flat and along Tamarack Creek on the 19th failed to reveal any sign of adults or tadpoles. Storer (1925, Synop. Amph. Calif., p. 42) has figured the mouth of the tadpole of canorus. Hyla arenicolor Cope. Indian Creek, San Jacinto Mts., Calif., July 19, 1927, D. H. Fry, Jr. Also adults and mature and metamorphosing tadpoles from Palm Springs Canyon, Calif., July 18, 1927, D. H. Fry, Jr. We have other specimens from the latter locality, March 28, 1929, J. H. Wales. Hyla regilla Baird and Girard. In the winter of 1928-1929 these were first heard in puddles behind the Museum on the Stanford Campus on December 5, in the afternoon. The first rains were a week before, the first to leave standing water only four days before. At Lagunita they were mating as late as March 9. Speci- mens at hand from Tahoe City, Lake Tahoe, June 27, 1911, Snyder and Richardson, and Rancho del Oso, Santa Cruz Co., March 17, 1929, Brown and Myers, both in California. Rana aurora draytonii (Baird and Girard). These large pond frogs seem to be becoming rare. Large ones are occasionally taken at Lagunita, Stanford Campus. Rana pretiosa luteiventris Thompson. One fine specimen, Quinn River near McDermitt, Humboldt Co., Ne- vada, July 30, 1913, J. O. Snyder. Rana boylii boylii (Baird). Marshfield, Coos Co., J. O. Snyder, and mouth of Pistol River, Curry Co., August 3, 1899, both in Oregon. Also from Idylwild, Big Sur Road, Monterey Co., Calif.,G.S. Myers. Our material from Quincy, Plumas Co., Calif., shows much variation in color and proportions. Some of the speci- 64 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. mens approach szerre in the short legs, but though the color varies, {t does not approach that of our Yosemite sierre. These little frogs are fairly common in foothill streams behind Palo Alto. As Camp and Storer have pointed out they are rigidly restricted to streams, draytoni and bullfrogs being the only pond frogs of the region. Rana boylii sierre Camp. Along Tamarack Creek above Tamarack Flat (altitude 6,400 ft.) Yosemite National Park, June 19, 1928, these frogs were occasionally seen. One young was taken. Next day, at Peregoy Meadow (7,100 ft.), in tributaries of Bridal Veil Creek, many large adults and many metamorphos- ing tadpoles were seen. We also have one adult from Mariposa Big Trees, Yosemite National Park (about 6,500 ft.), C. P. Russell, and another from Tahoe City, Lake Tahoe, Calif. (about 6,300 ft.), June 27, 1911, Snyder and Richardson. These various stations are the lowest on record for this form. Rana boylii muscosa Camp. Of this well marked subspecies we have two fine adults, Indian Creek, San Jacinto Mts., Calif., July 19, 1927, D. H. Fry, Jr. Rana catesbeiana Shaw. Bullfrogs are found along San Francisquito Creek, Palo Alto, possibly having come down from Searsville Lake, where, however, they have not up to the present definitely been observed. When the creek rises and fills Lagunita on the Stanford Campus, a few big frogs usually come with the water and are heard throughout the spring. One large adult, March 20, 1929, M. W. Brown, from Lagunita, is in the collection. Vol. 43, pp. 65-72 March 12, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHI COLOMBIA. BY GEORGE 8S. MYERS. Brother Hermano Apolinar Maria, of the Instituto de La . Salle in Bogota, has recently sent me a small but interesting collection of fishes from the headwaters of the Rio Meta on the eastern slope of the Cordillera of Bogota. The fishes were taken at Guaicaramo, at the junction of the Rio Guavio and the Rio Upia, almost due east of Bogota and north of Barrigén. The elevation is between 300 and 400 metres and there is direct communication with the Meta through the Upia. Manuel Gonzales collected on the east slope of the Cordil- lera along the trail from Bogota to Villavicencio and as far as Barrigén for Dr. Eigenmann in 1912. These, as well as other considerable collections received from Hermano Apolinar, were reported by EHigenmann in the appendix to his 1922 paper. This remains the compendium of our knowledge of Meta fishes. Despite this previous work, our knowledge of the tremendous fish fauna of the Orinocan drainage of Colombia is yet ex- tremely fragmentary, and no opportunity should be allowed to pass that promises to add anything of value. The present collection, despite its small size, contains four forms not before known from the region, two of them apparently new. Another one reported previously, but heretofore confused with its repre- sentative on the west of the Eastern Andes, is described as new. Sternarchus leptorhynchus, known both from Guiana far to the east and from the Dagua and San Juan, across the three ranges of the Andes, on the west, is particularly inter- esting. Included with the Guaicaramo collection were three Rivulus 10—Proc. Biot. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (65) 66 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. magdalene Kigenmann and Henn from El Castafial, a brook in the Upper Magdalena Basin, and two Pygzdiwm bogotense Higen- mann from Guasca, north of Bogota. GYMNOTIDA. Sternarchus leptorhynchus Ellis. One specimen, 210 mm. total length, from Guaicaramo. End of tail regenerated. Eye slightly in advance of middle of head. Anus nearer to vertical of angle of gape than to vertical of pectoral origin. Angle of gape reaching considerably past hind border of eye. These characters are at variance with those given by Higenmann (1922, p. 175) for specimens from west of the three ranges of the Cordillera, but my ex- ample agrees closely with Ellis’ original description, based on Guiana ma- terial. This is the first record of the species from the Orinoco Basin. It is probable that the population in the San Juan and Dagua Basins will be found to differ somewhat on closer scrutiny. HEMIODONTID&. Parodon apolinari, sp. n. Diagnosis.—A Parodon with small head, anterior dorsal fin, and a series of 13 or 14 vertical bars down the sides. Approaching P. suborbitale. but with a smaller head, deeper body, wider interorbital, and lacking longitudi- nal lines. Differing from P. gestrz of Matto Grosso and P. caliensis from across the eastern Cordillera in position of dorsal, head length, and other characters. Holotype—No. 23725 Stanford University, 89 mm. standard length; Guaicaramo, Rio Guavio, Colombia; January, 1928. Description.—Dorsal 1,10. AnalI,7. Pelvic 1,7. Scales 4-34-3,! 16 around caudal peduncle, 11 predorsal. Head 5.33 in standard length, depth 4. Eye 4 in head, 1.66 in snout, 2 in interorbital, which is contained twice in head. Snout equals postorbital part of head. Least depth of caudal peduncle equal to its length, 1.4 in head. Dorsal origin nearer snout tip than caudal base by a distance equal to snout plus eye. Origin of pelvics under sixth dorsal ray. Pectorals do not reach pelvic origin by 6 scales. Pelvics do not reach anal fin origin by 2scales. Anus situated 3 scales anterior to anal fin origin, well between the tips of the appressed pelvics. Adipose fin originating above base of last anal ray. Dorsal fin margin faleate when fin is widely spread, the first soft ray elongated, exceeding the head by a snout length. Caudal deeply forked, the lobes acutely pointed. Mouth decidedly inferior, snout rather pointed. The enlarged posterior parts of the mandibular rami each bear three heavy truncated incisors, their tips curving slightly outward. The premaxillaries each bear four teeth, extremely narrow at the bases and greatly widened at the distal ends, the margins being crenulated. These 8 teeth thus form a plane, continuous, 1The vertical series of scales is counted from dorsal origin to pelvic origin. Myers—Fishes from Upper Rio Meta Basin, Colombia. 67 finely crenulated cutting edge straight across the premaxillaries. Two smaller but similar teeth continue the serieson the upper end of each maxil- lary. The side, front, and inferior surfaces of the snout, as well as the region between the nostrils, are thickly beset with small prickly tubercles, ap- parently similar to the nuptual tubercles of male Cyprinoids. So far as I am aware such structures have not hitherto been noticed in the Characins. A series of 13 or 14 dark vertical bars with equal interspaces along the sides, a number of them continued faintly over the back. Snout and dor- sum brownish, venter lighter. Fins without definite markings. There is but a single example. It is comparable in pattern only with P. gestrt and P. caliensts, which differ sufficiently otherwise. Named for Brother Hermano Apolinar Maria, Director of the Museum of the Instituto de La Salle, Bogota. CHARACID A. Astyanax integer, sp. n. Diagnosis.—An Astyanax with predorsal region completely and regu- larly scaled, lateral line about 50, anal 30, the central caudal rays black, a well defined humeral blotch, and a wide dark lateral band from behind humeral spot to caudal. Holotype.—No. 23726 Stanford University, 91 mm. standard length, 115 mm. total; Guaicaramo, Rio Guavio, Colombia; January, 1928. Description.—Dorsal 11. Anal 30. Scales 10-50-7. Head 4 in stand- ard length, depth 2.8. Eye equal to snout, 3.5 in head, 1.33 in interorbital. Profile to tip of occipital process concave, thence evenly rounded to dorsal fin. Preventral area normally scaled, not compressed. Predorsal with a regular! series of 13 scales. Interorbital smooth, convex. Occipital process long, 3.6 in the dis- tance from its base to the dorsal, bordered by 4 scales. Frontal fontanel narrow, triangular. Maxillary reaches beneath anterior border of pupil. Lower jaw strong, equal to upper. Five teeth in inner series of each pre- maxillary, their outer surfaces concave, inner convex, the second, third, and fourth teeth seven-pointed, the last very small. Four teeth in the outer row of each premaxillary, the first set slightly forward. Mazxillaries each with a single tooth at upper extremity, set next to the small end one of the inner premaxillary series. Dentaries each with four strong gradu- ated teeth; a-small fifth tooth is in line immediately behind and the tooth series then swings inward and back with a few very small teeth. Gill-rakers 11+14, all of them rather long. Origin of dorsal fin an orbit diameter nearer to snout tip than to caudal base. Height of dorsal 3.5in standard length. Adipose fin well developed; caudal lobes pointed. Origin of anal equidistant from caudal base and origin of pectoral, slightly behind vertical of end of dorsal base. Pectorals reach pelvic fin origin; pelvics just fall short of reaching anal fin origin. One or two interpolated series of scales low in the region over anal fin. 1In all but one scale. 68 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Front of anal with a sheath of one row of scales. Lateral line slightly de- curved. A rounded humeral blotch almost as large as eye above second to fifth seales of lateral line; a faint vertical elongation above and below. Follow- ing this is a light space of three scales and then a dark band down side. Above the anal fin this is darkest and is as wide as the eye; over the end of the anal it narrows somewhat and then again widens at caudal base. The band is continued narrowly out to the tips of the central caudal rays. This species would appear to be close to some forms of A. abramis, but the well scaled predorsal area and the wide dark band remove it definitely from that species. Eigenmann (1922, p. 235) records A. abramis from Cafio Carniceria, but with the characters he gives it seems certain that he did not have A. integer. Hemibrycon metz, sp. n. Diagnosis.—Allied to H. dentatus (Eigenmann) and H. decurrens (Eigen- mann) in the sagging lateral line, differing in the smaller eye, shorter head, and projecting lower jaw, and variously from one or the other in anal fin position, depth of peduncle, and number of scales. Holotype.—No. 23727 Stanford University, 80 mm. standard length, 99 mm. total; Guaicaramo, Rio Guavio, Colombia; January, 1928. Description.—Dorsal 9144.1 Anal 29. Scales 8-42-5144. Head 4.66 in standard length, depth 3. Eye 3.33 in head, 1.25 in interorbital. Least depth of caudal peduncle equal to its length, 1.66 in head. Preventral area rather narrow, normally scaled. Occipital process short, bordered by 3 scales. Interorbital very convex in cross section. Predorsal with 13 scales not in wholly regular order. Snout rather blunt, lower jaw rather prognathous. Great suborbital covering entire cheek except for a very small area at upper posterior corner. Maxillary extending under first third of pupil, not quite reaching great suborbital. Five teeth in outer row on each premaxillary, the first and last set forward; four ininnerrow. Six teeth on each maxillary, the last remote from the others. Dentary with five large teeth on each side, the last two grading down to the row of small teeth behind. Gill-rakers 9+11. Origin of dorsal fin a shade nearer to snout tip than to caudal base, the margin nearly straight when fin is spread, the longest ray extending a scale- length beyond the penultimate when fin is folded. Pelvic fins reach anus but not anal fin. Anal origin under last third of dorsal base. Lateral line decurved, a straight line from its anterior to its posterior end passing through the middle of the second row of scales above it at a point above the middle of the appressed pelvic fins. Anal sheath of one scale row. Interpolated series begin over anal fin. Pectorals reaching down to base of pelvics (absolute measurement) or slightly beyond (horizontal measurement). Caudal with a very large basal scale on each lobe, this extending out a considerable distance. 1The last ray, split to the base, is counted as 14. Myers—Fishes from Upper Rio Meta Basin, Colombia. 69 A very diffuse dark lateral band, strongest on peduncle, and a faint humeral blotch. Middle caudal rays black. This form is undoubtedly the one from Villavicencio mentioned by Eigen- mann (1927a, p. 414, footnote 2) under H. dentatus. In the final analysis, dentatus, decurrens, and mete will possibly be found to be only subspecifi- cally separable, but at the present state of our knowledge all we can do is to give them binomial recognition. Mete resembles dentatus in anal fin position and in interpolated scales, and decurrens in depth of body, depth of peduncle and scale count. From both it would appear to differ in the projecting lower jaw, this being distinct in my only specimen, and in the shorter head and eye. Charax metz Eigenmann. Two specimens, 45 and 72 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. These differ from the types in the presence of pinnate black markings along the lateral line. C. mete is very close to pauciradzatus! and not far from the Anacyrtus sanguineus of Cope.? PIMELODID&. Rhamdia quelen (Quoy and Gaimard). Two specimens 77 and 115 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. Dorsal I, 6. Anal 10, counting rudiments. Jaws subequal. Teeth of upper jaw in a band which is not wider at ends than at center. Mazxil- lary barbels reaching origin of adipose. Fontanel not extending behind eye. Dorsal spine smooth. No lateral band. This is the first record for the Meta. PYGIDIIDA. Pygidium kneri (Steindachner). One specimen, 104 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. LoRICARIIDA. Cheetostomus anomalus Regan. One specimen, 80 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. Adipose well developed. Snout faintly spotted with small round light dots. Eigenmann (1922, p. 226, footnote) has named a new form, C. dorsalis, with no description. Only his reference to Regan’s figure places the fish. Undoubtedly the name was meant to apply to Regan’s speci- mens without the adipose, but I do not believe that the presence or ab- sence of the adipose in this group is of specific value. 1See Garman, Bull. Essex Inst., 1890, xxii, p. 11. 2Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, 1872, p. 266, pl. 9, fig. 1. 70 = Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Farlowella acus (Kner). Two specimens, 113 and 135 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. The larger is a male with broad snout covered with fine prickles, the smaller a female with more slender smooth snout. CICHLIDA. Crenicichla geayi Pellegrin. One specimen, 77 mm. standard length, from Guaicaramo. BIBLIOGRAPHY OF COLOMBIAN FRESH-WATER FISHES SUBSEQUENT TO 1922. Aut, E. 1923. Neue siidamerikanische Fische aus dem Zool. Museum Berlin. Sztzb. Gesel. naturf. Freunde, Berlin, pp. 106-109. (Describes Pimelodella conquetaénsis, n. sp., from Rio Coquetd, S. E. Colombia.) Breper, C. M., Jr., 1927. The fishes of the Rio Chucunaque Drainage, Eastern Panama. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 57, pp. 91-176, pl. 1-5. (Of pertinence to the fauna of N. W. Colombia.) Eicenmann, C. H. 1922. The fishes of Western South America, Part I. The fresh-water fishes of Northwestern South America, including Colombia, Panama, and the Pacific slopes of Ecuador and Peru, together with sn appendix upon the fishes of the Rio Meta, in Colombia. Mem. Carnegie Mus., 9, pp. 1-346, pl. 1-38 (The latest and only summary of Rio Meta fishes.) 1924. Yellow fever and fishes in Colombia. Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc., 63, pp. 236-238, pl. 1. 1925. A review of the Doradide, a family of South American Nema- tognathi, or Catfishes. Trans. Amer. Philos. Soc., N. S., 22, pp. 280-365, pl. 1-27. 1927a. The American Characide. Part 4. Mem. Mus. Comp. Zool., 43, pp. 311-428. 1927b. The fresh-water fishes of Chile. Mem. National Acad. Sct., 22, 2, pp. 1-80, pl. 1-16. (Reviews the distribution and origin of all S. American fresh- water fishes west of the Cordillera.) Husss, C. L. 1924. Studies of the fishes of the order Cyprinodontes. LIV. Univ. Michigan, Mus. Zool., Misc. Publ., No. 18, pp. 1-31, pl. 1-4. (No. II revises the genera of viviparous Poeciliide, including Colombian genera.) 1926. Studies of the fishes of the order Cyprinodontes. VI. Jbid, No. 16, pp. 1-87, pl. 1-4. (Continues, emends, and extends the last.) Myers, G. 8S. 1927a. An analysis of the genera of Neotropical killifishes allied to Rivulus. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., (9) 19, pp. 115-129. M yers—Fishes from Upper Rio Meta Basin, Colombia. 71 (Lists Colombian species and describes Rachovia, n. gen., for Rivulus brevis Regan, the types of which were taken at Soplaviento and brought to Germany as aquarium fishes.) 1927b. Descriptions of new South American fresh-water fishes col- lected by Dr. Carl Ternetz. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool., Harvard, 68, pp. 107-135. (Describes new spp. from Colombian territory along Upper Rio Negro and Orinoco.) 1928. The species of Piabucina inhabiting Colombia. Copeia, No 166, pp. 4-5. i ScumipT, P. 1928. On three rare cat-fishes of the Magdalena River (South America, Colombia). Comptes Rend. Acad. Sct. U. R. S. S., Lenin- grad, pp. 9-13. (Occurrence of the Amazonian Pimelodina flavipinnis Stdr. is recorded.) Vol. 43, pp. 73-78 | March 12, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE \ HSONTAW Ss BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHI O WS L “Soe THE STATUS OF THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA TOAD, BUFO CALIFORNICUS (CAMP). BY GEORGE 8S. MYERS. In the interest of the Natural History Museum of Stanford University, Mr. Gregory M. Kranzthor and the writer journeyed through the Southwestern States as far as the Davis Mountains in Texas during April and May, 1929. Our objects were chiefly herpetological, though fishes were collected where opportunity offered. Weather conditions were adverse most of the trip but we succeeded in bringing back some rarities, including two Elaphe baird:. arly rains in Texas permitted observations on several amphibians which otherwise would not have been seen until June or July. This, coupled with fortunate circum- stances in San Diego County, California, on our trip home, enabled us to make comparisons between the Desert Toad, Bufo cognatus Say, and its supposed close relative in Southern California, B. cognatus californicus Camp. Our observations confirm a conclusion reached by the writer long ago, that californicus is a distinct species not especially closely related to cognatus. The data on which this conclusion is based are as follows: 1, There is but a single large palmar tubercle present in cognatus, while in ~ californicus, in addition to the large tubercle, a second smaller tubercle is in- _ ii variably present at the base of the inner finger. 2. There is an apparently constant difference in the structure of the outer metatarsal tubercle in the two toads. In cognatus there is a flat tubercle “SS with a free cutting edge. In caltfornicus the tubercle is reduced to a small horny point; no cutting edge is present. 3. The under surface of californicus 1s much less coarsely granulated than that of cognatus. Even young specimens of cognatus show a pro- ®, portionally coarser areolation than adult californicus. 11—Proc. Broun. Soc. WasxH., Vou. 43, 1930. (73) 74 ~~~ Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 4. The two forms differ vn the cranial crests. The crests of californicus are less distinct than those of cognatus, and the nasal boss, so conspicuous in the latter, is greatly reduced. 5. The foot of californicus 1s comparatively longer than that of cognatus. The length of the foot, from the inner side of the tibio-tarsal joint to the tip of the longest toe, enters the length from snout tip to vent slightly less than two times in cognatus and about one and two-thirds times in californicus. 6. Full grown adulis of the two toads differ greatly in size. B. cognatus is constantly a much larger form than californicus, which does not equal half the bulk of the larger animal. A female cognatus of average size from Pecos, Texas, measures 85 mm. from snout tip to vent, while an exceptionally large female californicus from Rincon, San Diego County, reaches but 58 mm. 7. The two forms are distinctly different in color. Thelarge lightiedged green spots of cognatus are not present in californicus, but instead there are smaller spots distributed irregularly over the back, these being blackish in color. A prominent and very characteristic feature of the coloration of californicus is the presence of indefinite but conspicuous whitish areas disposed as follows: A heavy bar across the front of each eyelid meeting at the midline of the head to form an obtuse V, a patch on the front third of each parotoid, a small median spot between the middles of the parotoids, and a pair of elongate spots, diverging posteriorly, on either side of the midline at the middle of the back. The V on the head is seen in cognatus, but less whitish in color, and although apparent homologues of some of the other spots may be discerned in this form, these never have the same peculiar indefinite boundaries observed in californicus. Further, there is a characteristic mottling of light and dark along the sides which is not seen in cognatus. In general appearance it is always possible to distinguish the two toads at a glance, even though occasional specimens of californicus have the dorsal dark spots large and arranged much as in cognatus.} 8. The vocal sacs of the males of the two species differ sharply in form. The vocal sae of cognatus arises from the base of the throat and when inflated is kidney-shaped, extending far forward up in front of the head. (See Dickerson, Frog Book, pl. XXXIV, fig. 100.) The vocal sac of californicus originates in the normal position and when inflated is of the plain rounded form seen in B. fowlert. (Dickerson, tom. cit., pl. XXIX, fig. 83.) 9. The calls of the two species are vastly different. The call of cognatus is a trilled rattle, with much of the timbre of Acris in it. The call of 1The comparitive material of cognatus used, although from El Paso County, Texas, appears to agree well with the population of cognatus in the Imperial Valley, California. Along the Pecos River in Texas, however, cognatus is a very different creature, the large spots breaking up and the crests becoming reduced. More material may show much of taxonomic interest in the cognatus population of Texas. Myers—The Status of Bufo Californicus (Camp). 75 californicus is a sweet trill reminding one of B. americanus but somewhat lower and less prolonged. 10. Finally, the habitats of the two forms are trenchantly different, their breeding sites are unlike, and their ranges do not appear to meet. B. cognatus is strictly a desert animal throughout its range, living in burrows out in the desert and congregating for breeding at temporary (or in some cases peren- nial) pools at the advent of the summer rains. It appears to be generally confined to the Lower Sonoran Zone. In San Diego County, at least, californicus is met with only in the hills, which are comparatively moist, and most of its range is included in the Upper Sonoran. Here it is confined strictly to the streams in the washes (arroyos) and it is here that it breeds, considerably after the bulk of the winter and spring rains. Temperature appears to be more of a deciding factor than the rains, in this case. In range the two species appear to be separated by a neutral strip of variable width, although when more is known of the western boundary of the range of cognatus, this may not be very wide. So far as now known, cognatus is limited on the west by the extent of the Salton Sea and its associated waterways, the records being Brawley, Mecca, and Coachella. Our finding of Bufo woodhousi at El Centro and at Harper Well within ten miles of the San Diego County line, however, indicates that cognatus as well as woodhousit may be found at isolated stations right up to the base of the mountains. One has to climb up out of the desert to the comparatively moist heights about Jacumba and Julian (which here reach the Transition Zone) before localities suited to californicus are found. The above points, the most important of which appear to be numbers 1, 2, and 8, show without a shadow of doubt that we are dealing with two forms which can in no way be considered as subspecies. The Southern California Toad must then be known as: Bufo californicus (Camp). Bufo cognatus californicus Camp, 1915 (Apr. 2), Univ. California Publ. Zool., XII, No. 12, p. 331 (Orig. description, type locality Santa Paula, 800 ft. alt., Ventura Co., Calif.); Grinnell and Camp, 1917 (July 11), Univ. California Publ. Zool., XVII, No. 10, p. 141, fig. 4 (Range and distrib. map); Stejneger and Barbour, 1917, Check-list North American Amphib. Rept., p. 28 (Range); Hall and Grinnell, 1919 (June 16), Proc. California Acad. Sci., Ser. 4, IX, No. 2, p. 47 (Zonal range); Pratt, 1923, Man. Land Freshw. Vert. Anim. United States, p. 173; Stejneger and Barbour, 1923, Check-list North American Amphib. Rept., p. 25 (Range); Storer, 1925 (June 12), Univ. California Publ. Zool., XX VII, p. 192 (Re- description, history, range, etc.); Klauber, 1928 (July 1), Bull. No. 4, Zool. Soc. San Diego, p. 2 (Range in San Diego Co.); Slevin, 1928 (Sept. 15), Occ. Pap. California Acad. Sci., XVI, p. 107, pl. 16, fig. 2-3 (Description, range, photographs); Klauber, 1929 (Apr. 30), Copeia, No. 170, p. 15 (Range extension). 76 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. This distinctive little toad is known from a specimen taken in Tujunga Wash, near Sunland, Los Angeles County, by Dr. Joseph Grinnell, in 1904, another collected by Dr. C. L. Camp on a lawn in Santa Paula, Ventura County, in 1912, and a considerable series obtained in the last few years far to the south, in San Diego County, by Mr. L. M. Klauber and his collectors. The San Diego County records delineate in a general way its distribution in the south and indicate that it may extend some distance further, into Baja California. What its distribution to the north may be still remains almost unknown. There is a gap of ninety miles between the San Diego County records and the Sunland one, and again of forty-five between the latter and Santa Paula. It seems rather strange that other specimens have not come to light to the northward, especially in view of the considerable collecting that has been done about Los Angeles. Californicus is a secretive animal, however, and probably never wanders far from the washes in which it lives. Doubtless it occurs somewhat to the north of Santa Paula, following up the stream-beds, and it may reach Santa Barbara. The country between Los Angeles and Monterey is still little known herpetologically. Bufo californicus does not appear to break its hibernation until about the middle of May. It isin fact rather cold in the mountains of San Diego County until late in spring. We searched unsuccessfully for it in early April and Mr. Klauber tells me that he has not taken it so early in the season. On our return trip, on the night of May 31, 1929, I hunted along the creek near Descanso. It was cold, too cold, I thought, for toads. A number of Hyla regilla and a few H. arenicolor were calling from various places along the stream. At length a single toad call was heard, a high musical trill, entirely unlike that of halophilus. I carefully stalked the animal, but when I approached within what seemed to be twenty-five or thirty feet the call ceased and I was able neither to locate the singer nor induce it to call again. No others were heard and after considerable search we went on. In San Diego next day we visited Mr. Klauber and he had a number of live adults of californicus obtained at Rincon, San Diego County, a few days previously. He says they are easily caught on sandy or gravelly stretches in the bottoms of washes along the streams. If one stands still in the dark in early evening in such localities, particularly in the vicinity of growths of oak, the toads finally begin to move about and can then be found by quick use of the flashlight in the direction of the rustle of the dead leaves. We are greatly indebted to Mr. Klauber for the gift of six of these fine Rincon specimens. The present paper is based on a study of these indi- viduals, and it was one of them, calling in captivity, that finally enabled me to connect up the call heard at Descanso with this species. The toad called several times in the same clear trill. Mr. Klauber tells me he has often heard these calls in vicinities where californicus has been taken but has never been able to refer it definitely to this form. The ‘‘protesting’’ note of the male californicus, given when held without support for its feet, or when walked upon by another toad, is of the same Myers—The Status of Bufo Californicus (Camp). ue musical quality as the breeding trill, very different from the coarse note uttered by cognatus under the same circumstances. The end of May and the first part of June appear to be the breeding season of californicus. One of the females spawned not long after I had brought it to the University, but the eggs, though fertile, did not complete their development and were lost. This little toad has a peculiar resemblance to Scaphiopus couchii, on account both of size and shape and of the light marks on the back and the mottlings on the sides. It is easily distinguished from half-grown Bufo canagicus halophilus, the only other Bufo found in its range, by the absence of a conspicuous light median dorsal streak and the presence of cranial crests. Its numerous differences from cognatus are sufficiently indicated above. But even though the two species seem to have diverged to a con- siderable degree, there is abundant evidence that cognatus is the closest ally of californicus. The cranial crests, nasal boss, short legs, and color pattern all show this relationship. Occasional individuals of californicus show traces of the large blotches of cognatus and the patterns on the head and back are often very similar. The pattern of californicus appears to be derived from one like that of cognatus by a breaking up of the large spots and a general obliterating of the sharp borders of the colors in the latter type. The light areas may be partly a new development but the one across the eyelids is seen in the same place but with a definite edging in cognatus. ‘Those on the back may be derived from an enlargement of the light edges of the dorsal spots of cognatus. The following life colors were unfortunately taken without Ridgway’s Nomenclator in hand. Iris silvery or slightly yellowish gray speckled with black. Upper surfaces various shades of dull brown with a greenish tinge. All warts of back tipped brownish. Blotches black. Hind border of tarsus and rump largely black, the warts whitish. Under surfaces yellow- ish white, unmarked. Enlarged warts behind angle of mouth largely whitish. The type and paratype were described by.Camp and by Storer as lacking the external metatarsal tubercle. My material possesses this structure, as did Slevin’s. Slevin, in his key, has however substituted the inner for the outer tubercle, apparently through a slip. Further, it will be noted that the localities of the type and paratype are placed in the Lower Sonoran, whereas most or all of the San Diego County records are in the Upper Sonoran. It is evident that an amphibian, depending to so great a degree on the presence of water, and in this case restricted to a peculiar habitat, the washes, will not have the same limiting factors in its distribution as one might expect to find in a bird, mammal, or plant. In fact it happens in a large number of cases that attempts to explain amphibian distribution in terms of the ordinarily recognized zonal areas fails in a greater or lesser degree. For even more obvious reasons the fresh-water fishes of, for example, the Western States agree still less well. It is my opinion however that Bufo californicus, when more of its distribution is known, will be found to occur largely in the Upper Sonoran. Vol. 43, pp. 79-80 June 5, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON TWO NEW FORMS OF LAUGHING THRUSHES PROM YUNNAN. BY J. H. RILEY! Dr. Joseph F. Rock for the past two years has been exploring the high mountains in northwest Yunnan and southwest Szechwan in the interests of the National Geographic Society. During the course of his explorations he formed a large collec- tion of birds, which has been generously presented to the U. S. National Museum by the Society. In identifying this mater- ial the two following races appear to be unnamed and are de- scribed below. I am indebted to the authorities of the Museum of Compara- tive Zoology for the loan of material used in the preparation of this article. Garrulax albogularis eous, subsp. nov. Type—Adult female, U.S. National Museum, No. 314184, Fuchuanshan, 9,800 feet, Mekong-Salwin Divide, Yunnan, September, 1929. Collected by Joseph F. Rock (original No. 1667). Similar to Garrulax albogularis albogularis, but much lighter above, the forehead more strongly and extensively tinged with tawny; the cinnamon- buff of the breast lighter, the chest band a lighter brownish olive. Wing, 136; tail, 136; culmen, 22; tarsus, 43; middle toe, 24 mm. Remarks—Dr. Rock secured a series of four males and two females at the type locality. This series is quite uniform and differs as described from an unsexed specimen from Nepal. An unsexed bird from Kumaon, India, which I take to represent Garrulax albogularis whistleri, comes nearer to the Yunnan form than that from Nepal, though further away geographically; it has the forehead less extensively tawny, the black of the lores more restricted, and the breast a deeper cinnamon-buff. A series of four adults from Mount Omei, Szechwan, taken by David C. Graham, strange to say, is very close to the Nepal race; much closer than it is to the Yunnan form here described. This I can not understand 1Published by permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 12—Proc. Biot. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (79) 80 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. very well, unless the Szechwan birds came westward through Tibet and remained practically unchanged, while the Yunnan bird came south and encountered a different environment. Dryonastes berthemyi ricinus, subsp. nov. Type—Adult male, U. S. National Museum, No. 314,188, Nda much’o, 14,000 feet, Yunnan, China, October, 1929. Collected by Joseph F. Rock (original no. 1486). Similar to Dryonastes berthemyt of the mountains of Fokien, but lighter brown above and on the foreneck and jugulum; breast and belly a much lighter gray. Wing, 126; tail, 132; culmen, 20; tarsus, 42; middle-toe, 24.5 mm. Remarks—The type of Dryonastes berthemyi came from the mountains of northwest Fokien, probably Kuatun, and the form has never been taken away from there. It is rather surprising to find a closely related form in the high mountains of north west Yunnan, over a thousand miles from the type locality of the species. Nda much’o is south of Liitien on the Yangtze-Mekong divide. Doctor Rock secured two females and one male at the type locality. The U.S. National Museum contains an adult female of Dryonastes berthemyi from the type locality and the Museum of Comparative Zoology has loaned me a pair from near the same place; the three specimens are quite uniform. The three specimens from north-west Yunnan are also quite uniform and differ from the Fokien bird as described. The three specimens from Yunnan measure: Wing, 120-128 (124); tail, 125-132 (128); culmen, 20-22 (20.7). Two females and one male from Fokien measure: Wing, 116-118 (116.8); tail, 122-126 (123.5); culmen, 22.5-23 (22.7). La Touche (Handb. Birds E. China, pt. 1, 1925, p. 57) makes berthemyt a race of poecilorhynchus of Formosa, but I do not think he is right in doing so. They have both been derived from the same stock, but now are so distinct that it is misleading to treat them as forms of the same species. rr ah ie ey a | Ayres Vol. 43, pp. 81-88 June 5, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTO a LOA ths La : iy he oe i 4 ROTH FA 7 FERN MISCELLANY.:! BY WILLIAM R. MAXON. “nick Mest In the course of studying tropical American ferns received for identification at the National Herbarium, and reidentifying and arranging material in the herbarium itself, there continually come up a good many points which, though not important enough to justify separate publication, may prove useful collectively to other students of the group. It is intended to bring these together in a series of short papers, of which this is the first. They will consist of noteworthy extensions of range, occasional descriptions of new species, and miscellaneous system- atic notes, such as descriptive data, changes in synonymy, and the publication of new or transferred specific names. CYATHEACEHEAE Cyathea cuspidata Kunze, Linnaea 9: 101. 1834. Described from specimens collected in the province of Maynas, Peru, in February, 1831, by Poeppig (no. 2286), and usually ascribed only to Peru. The following specimens are at hand: Panama: “River banks of the Huigador, last Atlantic river on the Divide,’’ Darién, 1858, Schott 34. Bottvia: Polo-Polo, near Coroico, North Yungas, alt. 1,100 meters, Buchtien 3602. Antahuacana, alt. 750 meters, Buchtien 2196 (trunk 6 meters high). Tumupasa, alt. 540 meters, Williams 1335. Without locality, Kelly. Perv: Fragments of type collection, Poeppig 2286. Cyathea caribaea Jenman, Ferns Brit. W. Ind. Guian. 57. 1898. Cyathea purdiaet Jenman, Ferns Brit. W. Ind. Guian. 58. 1898. Cyathea caribaea and C. purdiaei were described as new by Jenman at the same time, the former from St. Vincent, the latter from Trinidad as ‘‘gath- ered by Purdie, Sept. 6th, 1862, on the heights of Aripo, and not apparently 1Published by permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 13—Proc. Biou. Soc. Wasx., Vou. 43, 1930. (81) 82 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. by any one since.” In reporting recent Trinidad specimens as C’. caribaea the writer was asked by Mr. W. E. Broadway whether or not these might be C. purdiaet, instead. Jenman’s type specimen of C. purdiaei has since been forwarded on loan from the New York Botanical Garden, and a comparison of this with typical material of C. caribaea from St. Vincent shows them to be identical, even to the smallest detail. The following specimens are at hand: Sr. Vincent: Without definite locality, H. H. & G. W. Smith 962 (probably the type collection of C’. caribaea). TrinipaD: Heights of Aripo, Sept. 6, 1862, Purdie (type of C. purdzaez). Mount Tocuche, in forest, April 3-5, 1920, Britton, Hazen & Mendelson 1360. Morne Bleu, in forest, March 18, 1921, Britton, Freeman & Bailey 2287. Heights of Aripo, Jan. 10-26, 1922, Broadway 9969. Without special locality or date, Trinzdad Bot. Gardens Herb. 15. Cyathea oyapoka Jenman, Ferns Brit. W. Ind. Guian. 58. 1898. Described from a specimen collected by Leprieur “‘in sylvis humidis ad torrentes, Guyana centralis, Oyapok superior, Junio 1833.” A portion of Jenman’s type material, bearing Leprieur’s number 267, was received for study recently from the Botanic Gardens, Georgetown, British Guiana, through the kindness of the Director. Agreeing closely with this are four ample specimens in the U. 8. National Herbarium: FrencH Guiana: The type collection, Leprieur 267. In sylvis humidis ad torrentes, Oyapok superior, Juin, 1833, Leprieur 194 (137). In sylvis paludosis ad basin montium, 1847, Leprieur 197. Without locality data, Leprieur 190. Fragments of Leprieur 224, received from Rosenstock as a new species related to C. cuspidata Kunze, are the same also. In general appearance C’. oyapoka is not very unlike C. caribaea, with which (as C. purdiaer) Jenman confused it; but its real alliance is with neither C. caribaea nor C. cuspidata, these being characterized by globose indusia, which rupture irregularly. In C. oyapoka the indusia are deeply cup-shaped, with even edges, placing it in another section of the genus. Hemitelia escuquensis Karst. Fl. Columb. 2: 181. pl. 196. 1869. A curious species, founded on material from western Venezuela (vicinity of Maracaibo Harbor), and known additionally heretofore only from Porto Rico, where it is rare. Much interest attaches to its recent discovery in Haiti, the specimens collected from thickets along the Marmelade trail, near Plaisance, Dépt. du Nord, at 400 meters elevation, Jan. 27, 1926, by Dr. W. L. Abbott (nos. 9308, 9309). SCHIZAEACEAE. Anemia karwinskyana (Presl) Prantl. This species was founded on specimens collected by Karwinsky at Cristo, Mexico, in 1827. It is strikingly distinct, and so rare in herbaria that much interest attaches to two additional collections, both Mexican: Mazxon—Fern Miscellany. 83 Real de Guadelupe, Michoacd4n or Guerrero, Sept. 15, 1898, Langlassé 353; vicinity of Tepenixtlahuaca, Distrito de Inquila, Oaxaca, alt. 650 meters, Dec. 1, 1921, Conzatit 4374. The strongly catadromous pinnules and segments at once set this and A. roset Maxon, also of Mexico, apart from related North American species. GLEICHENIACEAE., Dicranopteris lehmannii (Hieron.) Maxon. Gleichenia lehmannii Hieron. Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34: 562. 1905. A sharply characterized species, well represented by two specimens of the type collection, these recently received from Kew: Western cordillera of Popayén, Colombia, alt. 1,300-1,800 meters, Lehmann 6968. POLY PODIACEAE. Polypodium antillense Maxon, nom. nov. Goniophlebium acuminatum Fée, Mém. Foug. 11: 68. pl. 19, f. 1. 1866. Not Polypodium acuminatum Houtt. 1786, Roxb. 1825, nor Sod. 1893. This species, described originally from Guadeloupe, is known to the writer from Martinique (Duss 1652, 4735), Jamaica (Hart 42; Mazon 1022, 1918), Haiti (HZkman 9659), and the Dominican Republic (Fuertes 1770). It is allied to the continental P. swrucuchense Hook.; but that species, as represented by specimens from Costa Rica (Alfaro 122; Standley 34919a, 35234, 35440), Colombia (Ariste Joseph A 345), Ecuador (Jameson; Mille 35), and Peru (Macbride 3405, 3635), is amply distinct in many characters, notably in its broad, short, patent areoles, its prominent, whitish-trans- lucent venation, and its huge sori. Fée’s species name would be invalid under Polypodium. Polypodium fucoides Christ, Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 5: 2. 1905. Polypodium crassulum Maxon, Contr. U.S. Nat. Herb. 17: 598. 1916. In describing the present plant as a new species, P. crassulum, the writer failed to identify it with Christ’s earlier description of P. fucoides, founded upon a single incomplete specimen collected in Costa Rica by Werckle (no. 172), without definite locality data. An examination of Christ’s type specimen, kindly lent from Paris, shows however that the two are identical. This species turns out to be abundant in Costa Rica at eleva- tions of 1,900 to 2,600 meters, the following additional specimens being now at hand: Lankester 602, 716; M. Valerio A17, A64; Maxon & Harvey 8199, 8225, 8414, 8466; Standley 38086, 38118; Standley & J. Valerio 48160, 48199, 48222, 50448, 50489, 50641, 50667, 50687, 52182, 52279. Coniogramme americana Maxon. Founded on Palmer 1416 from Ymala and Palmer 1572 from Lodiego, both in the state of Sinaloa, Mexico. Two additional specimens are at hand, one collected from moist shady arroyo banks, Rancho del Limoncito, District of San Ignacio, Sinaloa, June 18, 1918, by Antonio E. Salazar (no. 403); the other a juvenile specimen (without number) collected at Acaponeta, Tepic, July, 1897, by J. N. Rose. 84 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Hypolepis pulcherrima Underw. & Maxon, nom. nov. Hypolepis purdieana Jenman, Bull. Bot. Dept. Jamaica 36: 10. 1892; not Hook. Sp. Fil. 2: 69. pl. 91, B. 1852. The present manuscript name, up to now unpublished, was given twenty- five years ago by Dr. Underwood and the writer to the high mountain Jamaican plant taken up as Hypolepis purdieana Hook. by Jenman, who failed to distinguish it from the true species of that name, founded on a Colombian specimen. Hooker’s type, recently examined on loan from Kev, is, as originally described and figured, small (the blade 25 cm. long, 8 em. broad), barely bipinnate, with rachises and midribs copiously tawny hirsute-villous, and sori definitely protected by recurved indusiform lobules, the margins of which are considerably modified, being thin, pale and dis- tinctly toothed. In all these particulars it departs widely from the large decompound Greater Antilles plant. Hypolepis pulcherrima is abundant at 1,800 to 2,200 meters altitude in Jamaica, especially on Blue Mountain Peak: Mazon 1370, 1458, 9912, 9935; Hart 159; Skutch 111; Watt 6; Bot. Dept. Jam. 100. It has been discovered recently also in Haiti: Massif de la Hotte, alt. 2,375 meters, Ekman 10636. Hypolepis ekmani Maxon, sp. nov. Plant of coarse aspect, the fronds apparently suberect and about 2 meters high, the primary rachis stout (5 mm. thick), dark ochraceous, unarmed, as also the deeply sulcate castaneous stipe. Blades presumably 1.5 meters long, 1-1.3 meters broad, tripinnate-pinnatifid; primary pinnae very oblique, short-petiolate (2-3 cm.), elongate-triangular, 40-65 cm. long, 20-25 em. broad, the bright ochraceous secondary rachis muricate, scarcely aculeolate; secondary pinnae 10-12 pairs below the acuminate apex, distant, oblique-spreading, the distal ones mostly equaling the proximal, only the basal pair subopposite, all narrowly oblong-acuminate, the larger ones 10-15 cm. long, 3-5 cm. broad, the tertiary rachis straight, yellowish, alate toward apex, scantily septate-villosulous; pinnules about 15 pairs, spreading, distant, mostly alternate, oblong-acutish, 1.5-2.5 cm. long, 6-10 mm. broad, deeply pinnatifid, the segments (6 or 7 pairs) close, slightly oblique, short-oblong, rounded-obtuse, lightly crenate; veins about 4 pairs per segment, pinnately arranged, simple, or the sterile ones often once-forked; sori 2 or 3 per segment, very large, round, widely surpassing the elongate receptacle; indusia borne at extreme sinus, small, submembran- ous, yellowish-translucent, shallowly concave, bearing afew minute, septate, easily deciduous hairs, spreading, never fully embracing the sporangia. Leaf tissue yellowish green, soft-herbaceous, bearing a few short appressed deciduous septate hairs above, scantily and minutely glandular-puberulous beneath. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,302,995, collected at the summit of Morne Formon, Massif de la Hotte, Haiti, altitude 2,200 meters, January 1, 1927, by EH. L. Ekman (no. H. 7503). The description is drawn partly also from three pinnae of the same number on loan from Copenhagen and an additional imperfect specimen in the National Herbarium, the latter indicating larger measurements than those here stated. Maxon—Fern Miscellany. 85 The present species is well marked, but at the same time is difficult of comparison because of confusion within the genus. It is most nearly related, apparently, to an undescribed species from the higher Blue Moun- tains of Jamaica. Notholaena sinuata (Swartz) Kaulf. A widely distributed and ubiquitous continental species now to be re- ported from Haiti: Crevices of exposed rocks, foothills near St. Michel de lAtalaye, Dépt. du Nord, alt. about 350 meters, Dec. 7, 1925, Leonard 7831. Apparently new to the West Indian flora. The material is thoroughly characteristic. Athyrium sciatraphis (Donn. Sm.) Maxon. Gymnoaramme sciatraphis Donn. Sm. Bot. Gaz. 19: 266. pl. 26. 1894. Founded on very complete material collected in the lowlands of eastern Costa Rica (Jiménez, Llanos de Santa Clara, alt. 195 meters, April, 1894, J. D. Smith 5084). Agreeing closely with the type are other specimens from Costa Rica, as follows: Tuis, alt. 650 meters, Tonduz & Pittter 11319; Peralta, alt. 450 meters, Lankester 896; without locality, Werckle. In all these a narrow, curved, persistent indusium is readily seen. The relation- ship is with Athyriwm ferulaceum (Hook.) Christ, of the South American Andes.! Asplenium leucothrix Maxon, nom. nov. Athyrium verapax Christ, Bull. Herb. Boiss. Il. 6: 292. 1906. Not Asplenitum verapax Donn. Sm. Bot. Gaz. 13: 77. pl. 2. 1888, which is Diplazium verapax (Donn. Sm.) Hieron., 1917. The present species was founded on a plant collected at Cubilquitz, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala, altitude 350 meters, by von Tirckheim (no. 8818). A specimen of the original collection at hand proves that it is no Athyrium, but an Aspleniwm, with acicular, markedly clathrate scales, allied to A. pumilum Swartz. A new name is required as indicated above, the name verapax being preoccupied in Asplenium. Asplenium standleyi Maxon, sp. nov. Rhizome arcuate-ascending, 2-4 em. long, 4-7 mm. thick; apex exposed, densely paleaceous, the scales oblong-lanceolate, 3-4 mm. long, 1 mm. broad, reddish brown, the middle cells rather large, polyhedral, with moderately sclerotic dark partition walls, the outer cells small, linear, with paler and thinner partition walls, the margins bearing a few long, lax, slender, few- celled, mainly retrorse teeth. Fronds 4-7, laxly cespitose, ascending, 30-40 cm. long, the stipes 2-5 cm. long, dull grayish brown (like the rachis), faintly alate above, glabrous; blades simply pinnate, mostly 25-35 cm. long, 4-6 em. broad near middle, linear-lanceolate, attenuate-caudate at apex (the linear-attenuate tip 2-4 em. long, pinnatifid-serrate), evenly attenuate toward base, the pinnae distant (2-2.5 cm. apart), retrorse, the 1Christ, Bull. Herb. Boiss. II. 4: 968. 1904. 86 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. lowest ones greatly reduced (5 mm. or less), auriculiform; rachis narrowly greenish alate adaxially; pinnae about 30 pairs, mostly horizontal, alter- nate, characteristic middle ones inserted 9-12 mm. apart, 2.5-3.5 cm- long, 7-9 mm. broad at the strongly dimidiate base, narrowly trapeziform- oblong, evenly long-acuminate from middle; veins 10-13 pairs, the distal basal one with 5-7 ultimate veinlets, the margin here dentate; proximal veins and those of the apical region (both sides) mostly simple, oblique, the margins simply serrate; middle distal veins mostly once-forked, the deep marginal serrations bicrenate-dentate; sori numerous (7-11 pairs), short (1.5-2.5 mm. long), subequal, distant, medial, oblique, the firm whitish indusia partially obscured at maturity. Leaf tissue membrano- herbaceous, translucent, dull green, at first with a few scattered appressed minute glandlike hairs beneath. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,150,764, collected on Sierra de Apaneca, in the region of Finca Colima, Dept. Ahuachap4n, El Salvador, in deep forest, January 17-19, 1922, by Paul C. Standley (no. 20136). Two additional collections by Mr. Standley (nos. 19767 and 19779) from the vicinity of Ahuachap4n, alt. 800—1,000 meters, are identi- cal. Allied to A. miradorense Liebm., but at once distinguished by its sub- herbaceous texture, paler color, long-acuminate, narrower, and less deeply serrate pinnae, and more numerous veins, and especially by its even rows of distant and relatively very short sori. Struthiopteris caudata (Baker) Maxon. Lomaria caudata Baker in Hook. & Baker, Syn. Fil. 179. 1867. Blechnum sprucet C. Chr. Ind. Fil. 160. 1905. Founded on a specimen from Tunguragua, Ecuador, Spruce 5329. Agreeing closely with the type specimen, photographed at Kew, is the following collection from Costa Rica, which apparently represents an addition to the North American fern flora: Volc4n de Barba, alt. 2,750 meters, July 29, 1926, M. Valerio 1. Leptochilus liebmanni Maxon, nom. nov. Acrostichum hastatum Liebm. Dansk. Vid. Selsk. Skrift. V. 1: 172. 1849. Not A. hastatum Thunb., 1784, which is Cyclophorus hastatus (Thunb.) C. Chr. This species, of which a good specimen of the type material is at hand (Barranca de Jovo, Dept. Veracruz, alt. 450 meters, in moist shady situa- tions, May 1841, Liebmann 2446), requires a new name, as above indicated. It is a remarkably distinct plant, in its numerous pendulous included vein- lets not at all closely related to L. alienus, to which it has been referred. On the basis of numerous free veinlets its general alliance is rather with L. cladorrhizans (Spreng.) Maxon, which differs however in most other characters, especially in its far greater size, stalked basal pinnae, and long-attenuate, usually flagelliform radicant apex. In L. lebmanni both the sterile and fertile blades are obliquely pinnatifid merely, the segments only about 3 pairs below the ample hastate apex. Maxon—Fern Miscellany. 87 Dryopteris columbiana C. Chr. Founded on H. H. Smith 998, from Santa Marta, Colombia, the actual type specimen being in the Bonaparte Herbarium. A complete specimen of this number in the U. S. National Herbarium is, however, D. muzensis Hieron., a species founded on Stzbel 453, from Colombia, and represented also by Pittier 892 from Cauca, Colombia, and Fendler 181 from Colonia Tovar, Venezuela. Though resembling D. muzensis in a general way, D. columbiana is at once distinguished by its long-ciliate segments and the long rigid hairs of the veins above. Two pinnae of the actual type specimen were obligingly forwarded by Prince Roland Bonaparte. Addi- tional specimens are: Cauca, Colombia, Lehmann 2968 (2 sheets); Chiriqui, Panama, Mazon 5202. Dryopteris pusilla (Mett.) Kuntze. This rare and peculiar Andean species is listed by Christensen only from Colombia (Lindig 92, the type collection; Sizbel 413 in part, 427) and Peru (Lechler 2242, 2691), the specimens all being in the Berlin Museum. The range is greatly extended by the following specimens, all in the U. S. National Herbarium: CotomsiA: Santa Elena, Medellin, Bro. Henri-Stanislas 1693. Region of Bogoté, Apollinaire & Arthur 173. VENEZUELA: P4ramo de Aricagua, Mérida, alt. 2,700 meters, Jahn 1012. Costa Rica: Voledn de Barba, alt. 2,600-2,900 meters, M. Valerio 51, 107, 208. Dryopteris warmingii C. Chr. This species, known heretofore only from Brazil (Minas Geraes, Warm- ing; Sao Paulo, Regnell III. 1449b), may now be reported from Bolivia, on a specimen collected at Rurrenabaque, altitude 300 meters, November 24, 1921, by O. E. White (no. 1801). Dryopteris malacothrix Maxon, nom. nov. Goniopteris asterothrix Fée, Gen. Fil. 253. 1850-52. Dryopteris asterothriz C. Chr. Dansk. Vid. Selsk. Skrift. VII. Naturv. Afd. 10%: 221. 1913. Not D. asterothrix Rosenst. 1909. The present species, which on account of its copious soft-hairy covering is one of the most distinctive members of its group in the subgenus Goniop- teris, was founded on Linden 1917, from Cuba, and is represented in the National Herbarium by ample material from Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti, Guatemala, Costa Rica, and Venezuela, which is uniform and has been well described by Christensen. The need of a new specific name is obvious. Dryopteris skinneri (Hook.) Kuntze. Aside from an Ecuador specimen (Spruce 5293) doubtfully referred here by Christensen, this species has hitherto been known only from the original material from ‘“‘Guatemala,” collected by G. U. Skinner and described ee »>) SS —_— ._ — —— 88 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. and figured by Hooker as Aspidium skinnert. A single detached frond from western Guatemala is now at hand. It was collected near Retalhuleu, March 25, 1921, by Rojas (no. A). Except for occasional forking of the veins it agrees with Hooker’s figure. Tectaria acutiloba (Hieron.) Maxon. Aspidium acutilobum Hieron. Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34: 450. 1904. There is at hand a specimen of the type collection: Banks of Rio Timbiqui, Colombia, Lehmann 8932. Tectaria sodiroi (Baker) Maxon. Nephrodium sodirot Baker, Journ. Bot. Brit. & For. 6: 164. 1877. Aspidium sodirot Hieron. Bot. Jahrb. Engler 34: 451. 1904. Apparently a valid species, founded on Ecuador material. A specimen from Colombia (Lehmann 8926), so determined by Hieronymus, has recently been received from Kew. Dennstaedtia arborescens (Willd.) Ekman, in litt. Dawallia arborescens Willd. Sp. Pl. 5: 470. 1810. Willdenow’s very brief description is based wholly on Plumier’s plate 6, depicting a Hispaniola fern which seems not to have been again collected in that island until recently (Ekman 1682, 3112, 5446, 6770, 7529, 7633, 7825, all from the Republic of Haiti). Although the illustration is poor in certain respects, it almost certainly represents the species collected in such abundance by Dr. Ekman. The specific name arborescens is however most inappropriate, and its use is owing to Willdenow’s having taken at face value certain data from Plumier regarding “‘arborescent”’ habit, i. e. a caudex 3 ft. high and 6 inches thick; these data of Plumier, taken in connection with his description of the pulpy interior of the caudex, point to some species of Cyathea presumably as a foreign element mixed in. Nevertheless this species name must be used. Twenty-five years ago the writer, not then having Hispaniola specimens in hand, gave a manuscript name (still unpublished) to Jamaican specimens which prove to represent the same species. They are from the Blue Mountains at 1,800 to 2,100 meters elevation, consisting of several speci- mens in the Jenman Herbarium (collector not stated) and others collected by J. H. Hart and Miss Winifred J. Robinson. Under the name Dicksonia adiantoides, Jenman in his Synoptical List incorrectly described the root- stock as “stout,” probably from reliance upon the Plumier’s plate 6 and the Willdenovian name (Davallia arborescens), both of which he quotes in synonymy. Actually, however, the plant has a typical Dennstaedtia rhizome, wide-creeping, 8-10 mm. thick, and devoid of scales, as shown by Miss Robinson’s excellent specimens. The relationship of Dennstaedtia arborescens is with three or four South American and Central American species which it is hoped later to illustrate and discuss comparatively. in ihacs S “yw Vol. 43, pp. 89-96 June 5, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON FIFTEEN NEW SPECIES OF GRASSES, SIX FROM AFRICA, NINE FROM CHINA. BY A. §8. HITCHCOCK. Recently Dr. Carl Christensen, the Director of the Copen- hagen Botanical Museum, sent to me for identification a collec- tion of grasses made by Mr. O. Hagerup during the Danish Sudan expedition of 1927 to the French Sudan and Niger Territory. Two collections from China have also been received, one from Mr. T. Tang, who collected in Shansi, and one from Mr. R. C. Ching, who collected in Kansu. Among these specimens the following appear to represent undescribed species: Diheteropogon hagerupii Hitchc., sp. nov. D. grandifloro spiculis et aristis minoribus, laminis basi cordatis differt. The specimens consist of the upper part of the culms only but the label states that the height is 1.5 meters. Culms and nodes glabrous; sheaths glabrous; ligule a membrane about 1 mm. long; blades of the inflorescence flat or folded, cordate-clasping at the widened base, this about 1 cm. wide, the upper ones successively smaller; branches fascicled in the upper sheaths, each bearing a long peduncle with 1 node and a long sheath with a much reduced blade, these branches 10 to 15 cm. long, bearing a pair of erect racemes; racemes, excluding awns, 2 to 3 cm. long, one sessile, the other with a peduncle about 4mm. long; sessile raceme with a pair of sterile spikelets at base and 3 or 4 pairs of heterogamous spikelets above; peduncled raceme with 4 or 5 pairs of heterogamous spikelets; sessile fertile spikelet 9 mm. long including the slender acuminate callus 3 mm. long, this densely pubescent except for a glabrous line on one side; first glume somewhat in- durate, 6 mm. long, pubescent on the sides, a deep cleft in the lower 4 mm. of the back, the upper 2 mm. flat, the joint of the rachis nearly as long as the glume, densely villous on the sides, the oblique summit excavated; second glume a little shorter than the first, pubescent; fertile lemma with 2 thin slender teeth 2 mm. long, the stout awn arising between; awn twice geniculate, the first segment 2 cm. long, brown, villous, twisted, the second 14—Proc. Brou. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (89) 90 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. segment similar but a little shorter, the third segment straight, slender, scabrous, about 4 cm. long. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,573, collected in a dry locality at Bara near Ansongo, Soudan Frangais, September 24, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 401). Panicum glaucifolium Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta glauca; culmi graciles, glabri, 100 cm. alti; laminae planae, glabrae, 15-20 cm. longae, 4-5 mm. latae, basi supra pubescentes; panicula patens, 15-20 cm. longa, ramis gracilibus ascendentibus, 7-10 cm. longis; spiculae glabrae, acutae, 4 mm. longae; gluma prima acuta, 2 mm. longa. Plant glaucous; culms slender, glabrous, apparently erect, 100 em. tall; sheaths glabrous or sparingly villous, sometimes villous around the summit; ligule a dense ciliate line less than 1 mm. long; blades spreading or ascend- ing, flat, glabrous or scabrous on the upper surface toward the acuminate tip, villous on upper surface at base or sometimes above the base, 15 to 20 em. long, 4 to 5 mm. wide; panicle open, 15 to 20 em. long, about 10 cm. wide, the branches ascending, slender, the lower solitary, 7 to 10 cm. long, naked on the lower half or third, the branchlets appressed; spikelets pale, glabrous, acute, gaping, about 4 mm. long, the pedicels sometimes with a few long hairs at the summit; first glume acute, about half as long as the spikelet, mostly 5-nerved; second glume acuminate, about 9-nerved, the nerves rather prominent; sterile lemma a little shorter than the second glume, obtusish, about 9-nerved, staminate; fertile lomma about 2 mm. long, pale. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,576, collected near water at Zinder, Colonie du Niger, alt. 360 meters, November 13, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 616). This species differs from P. coloratum in the larger spikelets and the longer more acute first glume. The Hagerup specimens show only the upper half of the culms but the label states the height to be 1 meter. Panicum nigerense Hitchc., sp. nov. Culmi ascendentes, glabri, 100 cm. alti; vaginae glabrae marginibus dense villosis; laminae planae, basi ciliatae; panicula patens, ovalis, 20-30 em. longa, ramis ramulisque patentibus vel ascendentibus, axillis villosis; spiculae lanceolatae, acuminatae, glabrae, 5-6 mm. longae; gluma prima, acuta, 2.5-3 mm. longa. Culms glabrous, ascending, 100 cm. tall, sheaths glabrous, densely ciliate on the margins; ligule a densely ciliate membrane about 2 mm. long; blades flat, glabrous beneath, scabrous on the upper surface, ciliate toward the base, villous above the ligule, the uppermost 4 mm. wide; panicle oval, open, 20 to 30 cm. long, the branches and branchlets spreading or ascending, the lower branches 15 cm. long, the branchlets bearing 2 or 3 spikelets toward the tip, the main axils villous; spikelets lanceolate, acuminate, glabrous, 5 to 6 mm. long, pale or tinged with purple; first glume acute, 3-nerved, about half as long as the spikelet; Hitchcock—Fifteen New Species of Grasses. 91 second glume and sterile lemma equal, acuminate, about 7-nerved, the sterile floret staminate; fertile lemma elliptic, yellowish, a little more than 3 mm. long. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,575, collected in dry locality, Niamey, Colonie du Niger, October 9, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 481). Only the upper parts of the culms are present, with a single uppermost leaf. The label states that the plant is “‘1 m., ascendens.”’ The species appears to be allied to P. miliaceum but differs in the glabrous sheaths, erect open panicle and narrower spilekets. Pennisetum molle Hitchc., sp. nov. Laminae planae, hispidulae, 7-16 mm. latae, basi cordatae vel subcor- datae; spica erecta, mollis, pallescens, solitaria, 5-10 cm. longa, 12-15 mm. lata, involucellis sessilibus, numerosis, dense confertis, 2-floribus; setae numerosae, graciles, erectae, inaequales, exteriores minores, interiores plumosae, 1 cm. longae; spiculae 6 mm. longae. Culms glabrous, pubescent below the spike, the nodes pubescent; sheaths glabrous or roughened with papillae, these sometimes bearing stiff hairs, the collar pubescent; ligule of stiff hairs 2 to 3 mm. long; blades flat, thin, sparsely hispid on both surfaces, rounded or cordate at base, long-acuminate, about 15 em. long, 5 to 15 mm. wide; spike solitary, erect, pale yellow or stramineous, 5 to 10 cm. long, 12 to 15 mm. wide, the axis villous; invol- ucres densely crowded, sessile, 2-flowered; bristles numerous, erect, one a little longer than the others, the outer scabrous, shorter than the inner plumose ones, these about 1 cm. long; spikelets lanceolate, glabrous below, scaberulous above, about 6 mm. long; first glume one-third as long as the spikelet. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,572, collected in dry locality at Gao, Soudan Frangais, September 13, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 340). Also collected at Timbuktu, Soudan Frangais, by O. Hagerup (no. 194). The specimens show only the upper part of the culms with 2 or 3 of the upper leaves. The height of the plants is given on the label as 0.5 meter. Leptochloa longiglumis Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta annua; culmi erecti, glabri, 30-50 cm. alti; vaginae villosae; laminae planae, parce villosae, 5-10 cm. longae, 2-4 mm. latae; panicula 10-15 cm. longa, spicis 10-20, 2-4 em. longis; spiculae appressae, cire. 5 mm. longae; glumae subulato-acuminatae, quam flores paulum longiores; lemmata 3-4, 2.5-3 mm. longa, pubescentia, nervis lateralibus dense villosis. Plant annual; culms erect, branching, glabrous, 30 to 50 cm. tall; sheaths rather sparsely villous; ligule membranaceous, truncate-erose, 1 mm. long; blades flat, sparsely villous, 5 to 10 em. long, 2 to 4 mm. wide; panicle erect or slightly curved, 10 to 15 cm. long, the spikes 10 to 20, straight or slightly faleate, ascending, 2 to 4 cm. long, 1 to 3 at a node, distant 1 to 1.5 cm. on the axis; spikelets appressed, slightly pedicelled, about 5 mm. 92 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. long, somewhat overlapping, about 4-flowered, glumes narrow, subulate- acuminate, a little longer than the florets; lemmas 2.5-3 mm. long, slightly keeled, appressed-pubescent, the lateral nerves densely villous-ciliate, awned from a cleft apex, the awn slender, straight, 0.5 to 1.5 mm. long. Type in the U. 8S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,574, collected at Labezanga, Soudan Frangais, September 29, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 453). Eragrostis hagerupii Hitche., sp. nov. (Sect. Pteroessa). Planta perennis; culmi erecti, glabri, graciles, 100 cm. alti; vaginae glabrae, summo villosae; laminae angustae, involutae, versus apicem scabrae; panicula contracta, nutans, circ. 30 cm. longa; spiculae lineares, 10-12-fl., 4-7 mm. longae; lemmata scaberula, cire. 1.8 mm. longa. Plant perennial; culms erect, glabrous, slender, 100 cm. tall; sheaths glabrous, villous at summit; ligule a dense ciliate ridge 0.5 mm. long; blades narrow, involute, attenuate to a slender point, scabrous toward the tip, 10 to 15 em. long; panicle yellowish-drab, nodding, contracted, about 30 cm. long; spikelets linear, 10 to 12-flowered, 4 to 7 mm. long; glumes acute, 1.5 and 2 mm. long; lemmas slightly keeled, scaberulous, about 1.8 mm. long, the nerves not prominent. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,577, collected near mangroves, at Lagos, Nigeria, December 16, 1927, by O. Hagerup (no. 784). Oryzopsis chinensis Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi erecti, caespitosi, glabri, 60-70 cm. alti; laminae graciles, filiformes, involutae, scabrae, 15-25 cm. longae; panicula ovalis, patens, 15 cm. longa, ramis binis, distantibus, gracilibus, 5-7 cm. longis; glumae aequales, glabrae, acutae, 3.5-4 mm. longae; lemma ellipticum, pubescens, flavescens, 2.5 mm. longum, callo brevissimo obtuso glabro; arista decidua, flexuosa, non geniculata, scabra, 5-7 mm. longa. Perennial; culms erect, cespitose, glabrous, 2-noded, the upper node below the middle of the culm; sheaths glabrous or very slightly roughened; ligule a very short membrane (0.3 mm. long); blades involute, setaceous or filiform, flexuous, slightly scabrous, the basal about half as long as the culms, the upper culm blade about 5 cm. long; panicle oval, open, about 15 em. long, the branches in pairs, slender, 5 to 7 em. long, branched to- ward the ends; spikelets clustered toward the ends of the branches; glumes equal, acute, glabrous, 3.5 to 4 mm. long; lemma elliptic, yellow or brown- ish, pubescent with light hairs, 2.5 mm. long, the callus very short, obtuse, glabrous or nearly so; awn deciduous, curved but not geniculate, scabrous, 5 to 7 mm. long. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,578, collected by mountain path, southern Shansi, China, alt. 1200 meters, May 18, 1929, by T. Tang (no. 788). This species has more slender blades and smaller spikelets than other Chinese species. Hitchcock—Fifteen New Species of Grasses. 93 Poa alta Hitche., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi erecti, scabri, circ. 100 cm. alti; vaginae scabrae; laminae planae, scabrae, 30 cm. longae, 2-4 mm. latae; panicula aneusta, straminea, 12 cm. longa, ramis erectis; spiculae circ. 4-fl., 4-6 mm. longae; glumae subaequales, quam spiculae paulum breviores; lemmata 4 mm. longa, basi paulum arachnoidea, nervis mediis marginalibusque pubescenti- bus. Plant perennial; culms erect, apparently solitary, scabrous, about 100 em. tall; sheaths scabrous; ligule about 2 mm. long; blades elongate, flat, scabrous, about 30 cm. long, 2 to 4 mm. wide, the uppermost blade below the middle of the culm, about 15 cm. long; panicle narrow, about 12 cm. long, the branches in pairs, appressed, naked below, the lowermost 5 cm. long; spikelets stramineous, about 4-flowered, 4 to 6 mm. long, the two upper florets reduced and scarcely longer than the lower florets; glumes nearly equal, a little shorter than the spikelet; lemmas (the 2 lower) 4 mm. long, the keel and marginal nerves pubescent on the lower half, the base with a few cobwebby hairs. Type in the U.S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,582, collected on open slope of mountain below summit, at Ning-wu Hsien, northern Shansi, China, alt. 2500 meters, August 21, 1929, by T. Tang (no. 1439). This species is unusually tall, with elongate blades. Poa debilior Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta flaccidissima; culmi tenues, retrorsum scabri, 20-30 cm. alti; vaginae retrorsum scabrae; laminae planae, glabrae, 5-8 cm. longae, 1 mm. latae; panicula patens, parva, 7 cm. longa, ramis paucis, gracilibus; spiculae 2-fl., 2.5 mm. longae; lemmata acuta, 2 mm. longa, minute hispida, basi non arachnoidea, nervis mediis pubescentibus. Plant very weak and flaccid; culms slender, retrorsely scabrous, 20-30 cm. tall; sheaths retrorsely scabrous; ligule acute, about 1 mm. long; blades flat, glabrous, 5 to 8 cm. long, 1 mm. wide; panicle open, small, about 7 em. long, the branches solitary, few, slender, 2 to 3 cm. long, bearing spikelets on the upper half; spikelets 2-flowered, 2.5 mm. long; glumes narrow, acute; lemmas elliptic, minutely hispidulous, 2 mm. long, not cobwebby at base, the keel pubescent. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,581, collected in a watery crevice, at Ning-wu Hsien, Shansi, China, alt. 2000 meters, August 21, 1929, by T. Tang (no. 1435). Characterized by the very slender weak habit and small spikelets. Poa shansiensis Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi tenues, erecti, caespitosi, glabri, 30-40 cm. alti; laminae flaccidae, 1 mm. latae; panicula parva, patens, 2-6 cm. longa, ramis binis, paucis, gracilibus, ascendentibus; spiculae paucae, stramineae, 3-5-fl., 5 mm. longae; glumae acutae, 2—2.5 et 3-3.5 mm. longae; Jemmata glabra, basi arachnoidea, 3-3.5 mm. longa. Plant perennial; culms slender, erect, cespitose, glabrous, mostly 2-noded, 94 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 30 to 40 cm. tall; sheaths glabrous; ligule 1 mm. long; blades flaccid, glab- rous, scabrous toward the apex, 1 mm. wide, the uppermost culm blade 2 to 3 cm. long; panicle open, 2 to 6 cm. long, the branches few, in pairs, ascending, naked below, 1 to 3 cm. long, bearing 1 or 2 spikelets; spikelets few, stram- ineous, 3-5 flowered, about 5 mm. long, the internodes of rachilla about 1 mm. long; glumes acute, 2 to 2.5 and 3 to 3.5 mm. long; lemmas glabrous except for a few cobwebby hairs at base, obtusish and scarious at apex, the nerves rather prominent. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium no. 1,445,580, collected in a shaded place at Mien-shan, Lin-shib Hsien, southern Shansi, China, alt. 1600 meters, May 30, 1929, by T. Tang (no. 906). Poa tangii Hitche., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi erecti, 40 cm. alti; laminae planae, glabrae, 1-2 mm. latae; panicula patens, 2-6 cm. longa, ramis binis, patentibus; spiculae circ. 4-fl., 6-8 mm. longae, lucidae; glumae 3 et 4 mm. longae; lemmata obtusa, 4-4.5 mm. longa, basi non arachnoidea, nervis mediis marginali- busque pubescentibus. Plant perennial, bearing slender rhizomes; culms erect, glabrous, 40 em. tall; sheaths glabrous; ligule truncate, 1 mm. long; blades flat, soft, those of the culm 1.5 to 3 em. long, 1 to 2 mm. wide; panicle small, open, 2 to 6 cm. long, the branches spreading or ascending, in pairs, the lower 2 to 3 cm. long; spikelets 1 to 3 at the ends of the branches, 4-flowered, 6 to 8 mm. long, shining; glumes 3 and 4 mm. long; lemmas obtuse, 4 to 4.5 mm. long, the apex hyaline, the base not cobwebby, the keel and marginal nerves pubescent on the lower half. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,445,579, collected in a shady ravine at Me-chaio-ku village, Ping-yao, Hsien, Shansi, China, alt. 1700 meters, May 21, 1929, by T. Tang (no. 835). Stipa chingii Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi caespitosi, graciles, erecti, circ. 80 cm. alti; vaginae glabrae; laminae filiformes, flexuosae, scaberulae, 15-20 cm. longae; panicula patula, 15-20 cm. longa, ramis capillaribus, scabris; glumae subaequales, 7-9 mm. longae, obtusae; lemma circ. 6 mm. longum, pubescens; arista circ. 13 mm. longa, geniculata. Perennial, cespitose; culms slender, erect, about 80 cm. tall; sheaths glabrous; ligule of culm leaves firm, 2 to 3 mm. long; blades filiform, flexu- ous, scaberulous, 15 to 20 cm. long; panicles loose, open, 15 to 20 cm. long, the branches capillary, scabrous; spikelets toward the ends of the branches; glumes subequal, 7 to 9 mm. long, obtuse; lemma about 6 mm. long in- cluding the callus about 1 mm. long, narrowed upward, rather sparsely pubescent on the lower half; awn twice geniculate, the lower bend obscure, pubescent below, scabrous above, the first section about 1.mm. long, the second 4 mm. long, the third 8 mm. long. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no. 1,245,799, collected in open woods, alt. 4000 meters, at Labrang, Kansu, China, by R. C. Ching (no. 785). Hitchcock—Fifteen New Species of Grasses. 95 This species differs from S. sebirica Lam. in the filiform blades, the smaller spikelets, and the less pubescent lemma. It may be the same as S. sibirica var.? pallida Hook. f. (not Stipa pallida Kuntze). Stipa purpurascens Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi caespitosi, erecti, glabri, circ. 20 cm. alti; vaginae glabrae; ligula acuta, 5 mm. longa; laminae filiformes, scabrae, involutae, 10-15 cm. longae; panicula angusta, pauciflora, purpurea, 2-5 cm. longa, axi glabro, ramis erectis; glumae aequales, 12 mm. longae; lemma fuscum, pubescens, 7 mm. longum; arista pilosa, circ. 12 mm. longa. Perennial; culms cespitose, erect, glabrous, about 20 cm. tall; sheaths glabrous; ligule acute, about 5 mm. long on the culm leaves, about 2 mm. Jong on the innovations; blades erect, filiform, scabrous, involute, those of the innovations 10 to 15 cm. long, those of the 2 culm leaves 2 to 3 em. long; panicle narrow, few-flowered, dark purple, 2 to 5 cm. long, the axis glabrous, the branches appressed; glumes equal, about 12 mm. long; lemma cylindric- fusiform, pubescent, pilose toward the summit, about 7 mm. long including the pilose callus about 1 mm. long; awn once-geniculate, about 12 mm. long, the first segment slightly twisted, pilose, the second segment straight, scabrous. Type in the U. S. National Herbarium, no 1,245,701, collected south of Sining, in the La Che Tze Mountains, Kansu Province, China, 3350 to 3900 meters alt., by R. C. Ching (no. 686). Avena suffusca Hitchce., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi erecti, 100 cm. alti; laminae angustae, involutae, scabrae; panicula ovalis vel oblonga, condensata, suffusca, 3-6 cm. longa, axi pubescente; spiculae 2-fl., rachilla pilosa; glumae aequales, glabrae, 1 em. longae; lemmata scabra, 8 mm. longa, callo piloso; arista geniculata, 1 cm. longa. Perennial; culms erect, about 1 meter tall, puberulent below the panicle; scaberulous below the nodes; sheaths glabrous or minutely scabrous; ligule a short ciliate membrane; blades involute, scabrous, narrow, those of the culm 2, 1 to 3 em. long, those of the innovations 20 to 30 cm. long; panicles oval or oblong, condensed, brownish, 3 to 6 em. long, the axis and branches pubescent; spikelets 2-flowered, the rachilla pilose; glumes equal, glabrous, 1 em. long, the first 1-nerved, the second 3-nerved; lemmas scabrous, pilose on the callus, about 8 mm. long; awn inserted a little above the middle, geniculate, a little twisted below the bend, about 1 em. long; palea about as long as the lemma, pubescent, the prolongation of the rachilla pilose. Type in the U. 8. National Herbarium, no. 1,245,557, collected at Ta Hwa, near Pingan, Province of Kansu, China, at 2900 to 3100 meters alt., July 17, 1923, by R. C. Ching (no. 527). Other specimens, both from Kansu, are: La Chang K’on, near Sining, 300 to 3300 meters alt., Ching 627; La Che Tze Mountains, 3350 to 3900 meters, Ching 687. The species belongs to the Section Avenastrum. 96 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Avena altior Hitchc., sp. nov. Planta perennis; culmi erecti, glabri, 100-120 cm. alti, nodis pubescenti- bus; laminae planae, pubescentes, 3-5 mm. latae; panicula patula, angusta, 15 cm. longa, axi glabro, ramis verticillatis, gracilibus, flexuosis, scabris, 2-4 em. longis; spiculae circ. 4-fl., 1 cm. longae, rachilla pilosa; glumae acutae, inaequales, 5 et 10 mm. longae; lemmata glabra, primum 9 mm. longum, callo piloso; arista geniculata, 1 cm. longa. Perennial; culms erect, glabrous, 100 to 120 cm. tall, the nodes pubescent; sheaths glabrous; ligule a truncate membrane scarcely 1 mm. long; blades flat, pubescent, 3 to 5 mm. wide; panicle open, 15 cm. long, the axis glabrous; branches slender, spreading, flexuous, scabrous, several at each node, naked below, 2 to 4 em. long, bearing 1 to 3 spikelets, the lower nodes 2 to 3 cm. apart; spikelets about 4-flowered, about 1 cm. long, the third and fourth florets reduced; the rachilla short-pilose; glumes unequal, the first 5 mm. long, the second 10 mm. long; lemmas glabrous except the pilose callus, the first about 9 mm. long, the second a little shorter; awn attached just above the middle, geniculate, somewhat twisted below, about 1 cm. long. Type in the U.S. National Herbarium, no. 1,245,731, collected south of Sining, in the La Che Tze Mountains, Kansu Province, China, 3350 to 3900 meters alt., by R. C. Ching (no. 716). This species belongs to the Section Avenastrum. | 4 : { 4) j Vol. 43, pp. 97-122 June 5, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON THE WASHINGTON SPECIES OF DRABAY’, BY EDWIN BLAKE PAYSON AND HAROLD ST. JOHN.?’ The genus Draba, a member of the Cruciferae, is well repre- sented in western North America. In the State of Washington one or more species are to be found in nearly every part. The arid plains of eastern Washington produce several species. These are all annuals, that shoot up with the first warm days of February or March. Until April they form a conspicuous part of the vegetation, carpeting the grassy slopes with white or yellow. As soon as the warm dry summer comes, they dry up, drop their seeds, and disappear. In western Washington they are also to be found, chiefly in sandy places at low elevation. The only one of the annuals that can be considered a montane species is D. stenoloba. Most of the annuals have broad ranges, occurring over a large part of the continent. They have been carefully studied and well classified elsewhere. The perennials have proven a much more interesting group. One of these, D. Douglasiz, occurs east of the Cascade Moun- tains, on the dry stony foothills, and D. caeruleomontana with its var. Pzperz is found in the Blue Mountains. D. Douglasii is the species with its pods so swollen, subovoid in shape, that its right to a place in the genus Draba is questionable. Dr. Gray first proposed to call it the new genus Cusickia, then published it as Draba Douglasiz, then later renamed it as Braya oregonensis. The other perennials are all montane species, mostly low matted cushion-like plants. Dr. Piper knew four species of the perennials from the State at the time of the pub- lication of his Flora of Washington in 1906. This interpreta- tion remained unchanged in Piper and Beattie’s subsequent 1Contribution from the Department of Botany of the State College of Washington, No. 18. 15—Proc. Brox. Soc. Wasu., Vou. 43, 1930. (97) 98 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. books, the Flora of Southeastern Washington in 1914, and the Flora of the Northwest Coast in 1915. Since then the Blue Mountains, the Cascade Mountains, and the Olympic Moun- tains have yielded treasures. Each mountain peak is likely to have one or two species of perennial Drabas. These are often very local or endemic species, and, as is here demonstrated, a number of them are new species. This joint study was begun with Dr. Payson two years before his death. Though it has been necessary for the later author to complete it alone, the manuscript was in an advanced state of preparation, and the opinions here expressed truly represent those of the two authors. The most valuable specific characters have been found in the habit and duration of the plant, the shape and size of the pod, the color of the flower, the shape and size and nature of the leaves, and especially in the kind and location of the pubescence on the leaves. Curiously enough, such characters as the presence of cilia, of branched or stellate hairs on the leaves seem to be the most constant and diagnostic points. On the other hand, the pubescence of the pod is of relatively little value. There are several pairs of rlants that differ conspicuously by one of the pair having glabrous pods, and the other having markedly pubescent pods. Some botanists treat these as distinct species. However, the two have identical ranges, or over-lapping ranges. In the second case, the rarer one appears occasionally and then always within the range of the commoner and more widely dispersed plant. No other characters have been de- tected to separate the two. They are identical in every regard but the pubescence or lack of pubescence on the pod. In such cases, one plant is here considered to be a variety of the other. Unless otherwise indicated the specimens studied and cited are in the Rocky Mountain Herbarium or in the Herbarium of the State College of Washington. In order to understand the relationship of the new species here proposed to the older species, it has been necessary to compare them with the types or with authentic material of the later. It is a pleasure to ex- press hearty thanks for the loan of such valuable material, by Dr. B. L. Robinson of the Gray Herbarium, by Dr. William R. Maxon of the U. 8. National Herbarium, and by Dr. W. A. 1Edwin Blake Payson died in Denver, Colo., on May 15, 1927. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 99 Setchell of the University of California. The librarians of the Missouri Botanical Garden and of Stanford University have kindly aided the writers by the loan of rare books. KEY TO THE WASHINGTON SPECIES OF DRABA. A. Annuals, not caespitose, B. Petals deeply bifid, white; pods 3-7 mm. long, at least the lower much shorter than the pedicels, C. Pods broadly elliptic to obovate, 1. D. verna, var. Boerhaavit. C.’ Pods elongate, oblong or lance-oblong,..la. D. verna, var. major. B.’ Petals entire or emarginate, D. Petals white; flowers dimorphous, E. Inflorescence in fruit short and compact; leaves mostly basal, F. Leaves coarsely hispid above with simple hairs... 2. D. caroliniana, subsp. typica. ¥.’ Leaves hoary above with forked hairs, G. Pods hispidulous with mostly simple hairs, 2a. D. carolaniana, subsp. stellifera. Ge@bodsrela nous ses) se el i ui nicmea ei anne ae Wott WN 2b. D. caroliniana, subsp. stellifera, var. Hunter. E.’ Inflorescence in fruit a long raceme; stems leafy, 3. D. viperensis. D.’ Petals yellow; inflorescence in fruit elongate; flowers all alike and not cleistogamous, H. Pods 3-10 mm. long; pedicels usually much longer than the pods, I tPodsipulberulemt./: tanh eo eae 4. D. nemorosa. be Podsislabrous,.. vine aid 4a. D. nemorosa, var. leiocarpa. H.’ Pods 10-15 mm. long; pedicels mostly shorter than the POO CL SUD Bees NAS, toads aN ASR OR SY 5. D. stenoloba. A.’ Perennials, or biennials, J. Plant leafy stemmed, K. Biennial; style 1-2 mm. long; pods broadly elliptic to oblong, Ar Evy TV TAR WV @ ets eA UL Ree, WR ei RL 6. D. aureola. K.’ Perennial; style about 0.1 mm. long; pods lanceolate to narrowly oblongi72—au mln pwid elute eae a Beis ce 7. D. cascadensis. J.’ Plant scapose or nearly so, L. Style 0-0.5 mm. long; leaves stellate pubescent, M. Pods linear, usually twisted, 10-15 mm. long, N. Stems glabrous, or at least so above, O8 Bods)\clalro us sey ue ii aU eat 8. D. lonchocarpa. O.’ Pods puberulent on the margins, ..... 222 7a. D. lonchocarpa, var. semitonsa. N.’ Stems and pedicels stellate pubescent, 2... 8b. D. lonchocarpa, var. vestita. M.’ Pods ovate-lanceolate, 2-5 mm. long, 2. ene eeeneee eee 9. D. novolympica. 100 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. L.’ Style 0.5-2 mm. long, P. Leaves with simple cilia, lacking any stellate or branched hairs, Q. Pods subovoid; flowers white; cilia on leaves short suid wesllcges 1 sti uh) 10. D. Douglasi. Q.’ Pods strongly flattened; flowers yellow; cilia long amd SEOUb Mee Mee. ie ae ee 11. D. Nelsoniz. P.’ Leaves with some branched or stellate hairs, R. Leaves oblanceolate to suborbicular, .................... 12. D. ruazes. R.’ Leaves linear or slightly spatulate, S. Leaves with few stellate or branched hairs, prominently ciliate with stout distant simple cilia, T. Pods puberulent with simple or forked hairs. sey 13a. D. caeruleomontana, var. Pipert. T.’ Pods glabrous,...._........ 13. D. caeruleomontana. S.’ Leaves with many branched or stellate hairs, U. Leaves linear, strongly ciliate to the tip, loosely pubescent with hispid and branchedWhairs.] 14, D. Paysoni, U.’ Leaves narrowly _ linear-oblanceolate,: ciliate towards the base, softly stellate with short more or less appressed hairs, V. Pods puberulent,..........__.. 15. D. incerta. Ve" Podsiglabrous:20y ei nnin ae 15a. D. incerta, var. laevicapsula. 1. Draba verna L., var. Boerhaavii Van Hall, Specim. bot. 149, 1821. Erophila Boerhaavit (Van Hall) Dumort. Fl. Belg. 120, 1827. Erophila spathulata Lang, Syll. Soc. Ratisb. 1: 180, 1824. Annual, rosulate at base; roots fibrous and with a slender taproot; leaves all basal, obovate-spatulate subacute, entire or 1—3-dentate on each side narrowed into a petiole, pubescent above and somewhat so beneath with mostly branched hairs, petioles ciliate with simple hispid hairs, 4-20 mm. long, 2-5 mm. broad; stems one to several, pubescent below with short simple or branched hairs, glabrous above, 1-10 em. tall; inflorescence racemose, becoming loosely so after anthesis, 5—-10-flowered; pedicels slender, flexuous ascending, glabrous, 5-20 mm. long; flowers small, 1-2 mm. long; sepals obovate green, yellowish or whitish hyaline on the mar- gins, 1-1.4 mm. long, glabrous or hispid; petals white, cleft to about the middle into two elliptic lanceolate lobes, 1-2 mm. long; stamens 6, anthers globose 0.3 mm. long, filaments linear; nectar glands conical lateral, i. e. at the base of the short filaments; pods glabrous veiny, broadly elliptic to obovate, 3.5-6 mm. long, 3-4 mm. broad, style minutely apiculate. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 101 DistriBuTIoN: Upper Sonoran and Humid Transition. Type: Onan old city wall of Delft, in abundance, J. Van Spyk Vermeulen. Brenton County: Gravelly beach of Columbia River, Paterson, April 9, 1927, St. John, English, Jones & Mullen 8066. Kuicxitat County: Very abundant at Bingen, April 11, 1921, Suksdorf 10702. Sxaqait County: Anacortes, April 11, 1925, Hdith Hardin; clay bank, Anacortes, April 12, 1925, Hardin; rocky bluff, Weaverling’s Spit, near Anacortes, April 25, 1925, Hardin. SPoKANE County: Near Fort Wright, April 3, 1920, Netite M. Cook. Wuitman County: Rocky hillside, Wawawai, April 2, 1927, Brigido Villaneuva; Wawawai, April 2, 1927, Thos. Onstott; slopes of Wawawai Canyon, March 6, 1921, St. John 5881. It is not an original observation to notice variation within the Linnean species Draba verna. Many botanists, especially those of Europe, have distinguished and named these variants. Depending on the view-point of the worker, these have been given every rank from forma to species, and the species kept in Draba or made the separate genus Erophila. The plants have been shown to be cleistogamous. As a result of this method of fertilization, many small variants or races have arisen within the group. These breed true and usually have natural, though very restricted ranges. The French botanist Alexis Jordan described over 200 of these as elemen- tary species. Few botanists of the present time consider them all of specific value, but the majority of the recent European workers give them a taxonomic status. Noteworthy among these botanists are Is. Maranne, G. C. Druce, and O. E. Schulz. Draba verna has been considered an introduced species in North America. Perhaps from this reason and perhaps from the fact that it is relatively uncommon in the eastern and older settled parts, it has been given but little study. It is almost a fixed tradition among the botanists of North America to discount or overlook any variation in the species and call all collections of it Draba verna. In the State of Washington the plant is very abundant on the arid plains of the eastern part. It is occasional at low elevation near Puget Sound in western Washington. Here the plants have short rounded pods, so conspicuously different from the long narrow ones of the east side plants, that even beginning students notice the difference and are puzzled by it. On investigating them, it was obvious that they had ranges that only partially overlapped and had morphological characters that were relatively constant and conspicuous. Hence these two variants are being maintained by the writers. A number of the botanists who have made a prolonged study of the group segregate it as the genus Hrophila. These include Is. Maranne? and O. E. Schulz.2 The only tangible character to justify this is the possession of two-lobed petals, instead of the entire, or frequently emargi- nate, or shallowly lobed ones of Draba. To the writers this solitary 1Bull. Soc. Bot. France 60: 379, 1913. 2Pflanzenreich iv. fam. 105: 343, 1927. 102 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. character, though a morphological one of the flower, seems to be one of degree only, and to be relatively unimportant. The lack of any important correlated characters, of any difference in habit, or in range, convince them that these annual plants with cleft petals are best kept in the genus Draba. In agreement with this point of view are Dalla Torre and Harms, Engler and Prantl, Halacsy, and many others. la. D. verna L., var. major Stur, Oester. Bot. Zeitschr. 11: 153, 195, 1861. Erophila majuscula Jord. Pugill. 11, 1852; Diagn. 244, 1864. Draba verna L., var. majuscula (Jord.) Grenier, Fl. Jurass. 63, 1865. Annual, similar to var. Boerhaaviz, but the leaves often more coarsely dentate; the petals 2.5-4 mm. long; and the pods elongate, oblong or lance-oblong, 5-8 mm. long, 1.5—2.5 mm. broad. DistripuTion: Upper Sonoran and Arid Transition. Type: Buco- vinae (Rumania). Asotin County: Grassy hillside, Birch Creek, T. 7 N., R. 47 E., May 22, 1927, St. John 8166. Brenton County: Muddy beach of Columbia River, Plymouth, April 9, 1927, St. John, English, Jones & Mullen 8046; gravelly beach of Columbia River, Paterson, April 9, 1927, St. John, English, Jones, & Mullen 8067. FRANKLIN County: Palouse Falls, April 15, 1928, Nettie M. Cook. Skamania County: Dog Creek near Cooks, April 24, 1922, Suksdorf 10780. Spokane County: Pry rocky bench above Bonnie Lake, May 30, 1923, St. John, Pickett & Warren 3197. Watta Watia County: Walla Walla, April 20, 1898, Leckenby; rocky slopes, Waitsburg, April 18, 1898, Horner 606. WuitMAn County: Malden, April 27, 1922, V. A. Griffeth; grassy hillside, Pullman, April 28, 1927, B. Villanueva; dry open slopes, north bank of Palouse River, below Colfax, April 29, 1922, St. John 2974; hill- sides, Wawawai Canyon, April 3, 1926, G. N. Jones 733; grassy hillside, head of Hatwai Creek, May 27, 1928, St. John 9523. Field notes kept by Mr. St. John show that this plant is excessively common over most parts of eastern Washington at moderate elevation. 2. D. caroliniana Walt., subsp. typica, subsp. nov. D. caroliniana Walt., Fl. Carol. 174, 1788. Slender annual; roots small and fibrous; leaves mostly basal, forming a rosette, entire or rarely 3-denticulate, obovate or suborbicular-spathulate, cuneate at base or short petioled, rough pubescent with branched hairs, especially beneath, 5-15 mm. long; cauline leaves few, borne on the lower quarter of the scape-like stem, similar to the basal but pubescent above with mostly long simple hispid hairs; stem at anthesis 3-8 cm. tall, at fruiting time up to 14 cm. tall, slender, simple or frequently branched from the base, hispid below with simple and forked hairs, glabrous above; inflorescence sub-umbellate, becoming cymose or at times short racemose, Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 103 6-16-flowered; pedicels slender short 1-5 mm. long, glabrous; flowers dimorphous, the first and central branch and other strong branches bearing large petaliferous flowers, these with sepals ovate, sparsely hispid on the back or glabrous, 1.5-2 mm. long; petals white 3.5-4 mm. long, with a slender claw half as long as the blade, the blade obcordate, emarginate at the tip; stamens 6, anthers ellipsoid, 0.5 mm. long, filaments subulate; nectar glands wanting; cleistogamous flowers borne on weak lateral or late branches, sepals linear-oblong, sparsely hispid toward the tip or glabrous, 1-1.5 mm. long; petals narrowly spathulate, equaling the sepals or shorter or frequently entirely wanting; stamens 4 or 6, the anthers minute 0.2 mm. long, the filaments capillary; pods ascending, often in a subumbellate cyme, linear, straight or curved, somewhat cuneate at the base, rounded at the tip, compressed and flat, with a prominent midrib and visible netted lateral veins, glabrous, 1.3-2 mm. broad; style wanting; stigma small and depressed. Distrisution: Zone not known. Type: None mentioned. Wasuincton: Howell in 1882 (according to O. E. Schulz); Cascade Mts., 1882, Tweedy 162. There is a possibility that these collections did not come from the State of Washington. Their data is meager, and has perhaps been confused. This true species has not been re-collected in the State. However, O. E. Schulz in his treatment in the Pflanzenreich cites another Howell collection from Umatilla, Oregon, which is just across the Columbia River from Washington. All other collections that he cites are from east of the Rocky Mountains. The new name subsp. typica applies to the original D. caroliniana Walt. The writers have no desire to complicate in an unnecessary way the nomen- clature of this group, and they realize the reluctance of the botanists in America to adopt long cumbersome names with many subdivisions. In this case, D. carolinana falls into five or six subdivisions, each with the characters that are considered of varietal value in this genus. Then the pubescence of the leaves assembles these into two groups which logically need names in a category superior to the variety. These are almost strong enough to be considered species, but they all have that habital resemblance, which so often is the deciding factor in such cases. Hence the original D. carolinana is here named as subsp. typica. Under this should be classified the var. micrantha (Nutt.) Gray, and probably the var. dolichocarpa O. E. Schulz, though material of this has not been examined. 2a. D. caroliniana Walt., subsp. stellifera (O. E. Schulz) comb. nov. D. caroliniana Walt., £. stellifera O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 333, 1927. Differing from the var. micrantha by having the upper leaf surface of the cauline leaves as well as the rest of the leaf rough pubescent with white branched hairs. The leaves are also sparsely ciliate with simple hispid hairs towards the base, and occasionally a few of these simple hairs are to be found on the upper surface near the petiolar base. The nature 104 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. and position of the pubescence on the leaves is one of the most constant and fundamental characters to be found in the genus Draba. On the other hand the pubescence or smoothness of the pods seems of minor importance, as there are many pairs of plants differing in no other way, occurring together and having no distinct ranges. Only in the far western part of North America are these plants with the branched pubescent cauline leaves to be found. Because of this fundamental character which is correlated with a geographic range, the plant is raised to the category subspecies. DistrisuTion: Upper Sonoran. Type: Not indicated, but the speci- mens were from Idaho, Washington, and California. The first mentioned was Idaho: Upper Ferry, Clearwater River, Lewiston (J. H. Sandberg, D. T. MacDougal, A. A. Heller, 1892, n. 141). Grant County: Steep coulee slope, above Fish Hatchery, head of Crab Creek, n. e. of Moses Lake, March 31, 1921, St. John 6028. Spokane County: Spokane, May 23, 1897, Piper. WatiA Watua County: Dry rocky south slopes, Waitsburg, March 27, April 22, 1897, Horner 74. Wuitman County: Almota, May 2, 1897, Prper & Sheldon; Snake River bluffs, Wawawai, April 17, 1897, Pzper 2801. Yakima County: North Yakima, May 27, 1892, Henderson. 2b. D. caroliniana Walt., subsp. stellifera (O. E. Schulz) Payson and St. John, var. Hunteri var. nov. It differs from the subsp. stellifera only by having the pods glabrous. A subsp. stellifera differt in siliquis glabris. DistripuTion: Upper Sonoran. Type: Ephrata, St. John 6006. Asotin County: Sandy soil, Clarkston, March 17, 1900, B. Hunter 1. Grant County: Course red sand, ridge n. of Ephrata, April 1, 1921, . H. St. John 6006 (type in Herb. State College of Washington). Yakima County: Rattlesnake Hills, March 20, 1924, Ramaley. The following specimen has also been examined from Ipauo: Lewiston, Nez Perce Co., March 17, 1900, Hunter. 3. D. viperensis St. John, sp. nov. Slender annual; roots small white fibrous, with a definite taproot and thread-like laterals; basal leaves several, forming a rosette, but most of these leaves withering after anthesis, oblanceolate to obovate, narrowed to a short petiole, remotely few dentate near the tip, hispid with simple white hairs on the upper surface on the petiole and near the base, elsewhere densely white hispid with stellate and forked hairs, the petiole ciliate with simple hispid hairs, 5-20 mm. long, 3-10 mm. broad; cauline leaves 4-6, evenly distributed on the lower half of the plant, not or scarcely reduced upwards, ovate-lanceolate to elliptic-lanceolate or oblanceolate sessile, remotely but sometimes deeply dentate, similarly pubescent to the basal leaves, 5-26 mm. long, 2-15 mm. broad; stems slender, spreading white pilose with mostly stellate hairs, also with simple and forked hairs, 4-25 Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 105 em. tall, the large plants producing lateral branches from one or several of the upper nodes, these lateral branches markedly leafy up to the first flower; terminal inflorescence a loose raceme even during anthesis, 5—-50- flowered, but only a minority of these setting fruit, similarly pubescent to the stems; pedicels slender, somewhat ascending, white pilose with mostly forked and stellate hairs, pedicels 5-12 mm. long; sepals hyaline margined, green becoming yellowish, the outer lanceolate-elliptic, the inner elliptic- obovate, 2 mm. long, markedly white simple pilose; petals white, with an obcordate blade tapering into the slender claw one third its length, 4 mm. long; stamens 6, 2—2.5 mm. long, the anthers cordate to suborbicular, 0.4mm. long, the filaments subulate somewhat inflated at the base; nectar glands lateral, that is one on either side of each of the two short stamens, deltoid, conical, the median glands wanting; inflorescence of lateral branches short and subcymose at anthesis; sepals oblong-elliptic slightly unequal, 1-1.5 mm. long; petals similar in shape to those of the macranthous flowers but smaller unequally developed not exceeding the sepals or rarely one of them so doing; stamens 6, 1.5-1.7 mm. long, the anthers reniform to broadly cordate, 0.1 mm. long, the filaments filiform and narrowly deltoid at base; nectar glands none; pods flat compressed, broadly elliptic, white puberulent with ascending simple hairs, 5-8 mm. long, 2-3 mm. wide, not contorted, style wanting or nearly so; stigma depressed; ovules 30-48; mature seeds brown elliptical or oblong, flattened, 0.6—0.7 mm. long. Annua, foliis rosulatis oblanceolatis vel obovatis petiolatis dentatis pilis simplicibus bifurcis stellatisque hispidis 5-20 mm. longis 3-10 mm. latis, foliis caulinis 4-6, inflorescentiis terminalibus laxe racemosis 5—50- floris, floribus dimorphis, petalis albis obcordatis 4 mm. longis, siliculis ellipticis puberulis 5-8 mm. longis 2-3 mm. latis. DistrisuTion: Upper Sonoran. Type: Big Canyon Creek, Idaho, Skiallin & Warren 720. Asotin County: Rocky hillside, Buffalo Rock, T. 8 N., R. 47 E., May 29, 1927, H. St. John, P. Gaona, G. N. Jones & F. Warren 8251. The following specimens from other States have also been examined: Orncon: Grassy slopes, 1300 ft. alt., Somers Creek, T. 2 N., R. 50 E., Wallowa Co., May 8, 1927, H. St. John 8145; gravel slopes near mouth of Tryon Creek, 1100 ft. alt., T. 3 N., R. 50 E., Snake River Canyon, Wallowa Co., May 18, 1929, St. John 9828. Ipano: Dry rocky hillsides near camp, Big Canyon Creek, T. 27 N., R. 2 W., Idaho Co., April 6, 1928, J. H. Skillin & F. A. Warren 720 (type in Herb. State College of Washington). D. viperensis is a member of the Section Tomostima, which is remarkable for having dimorphic flowers. The terminal racemes bear large flowers with showy petals and nectar glands, while the lateral racemes have much smaller inconspicuous and apparently cleistogamous flowers with reduced petals, minute anthers and no nectar glands. The showy flowers often fail to set fruit, while the micranthous ones do so abundantly. This section contains six species of North and South America. The only one of these recognized species occurring in the Pacific Northwest is D. caro- lintiana Walt. with its subspecies The species here described as new, 106 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. most closely resembles one native from Uruguay to Tierra del Fuego. The two may be distinguished as follows: D. australis R. Br. has the stem in fruit up to 10 cm. tall, branched from the base, long aphyllous above, ap- pressed puberulent below, glabrous above; the cauline leaves often sub- opposite or subverticillate; the micranthous flowers with linear sepals and four stamens. D. viperensis St. John, on the other hand, has the stem in fruit up to 25 cm. tall, simple or branched from the upper axils, leafy to the inflorescence, spreading pubescent throughout, the cauline leaves alternate; and the micranthous flowers with oblong-elliptic sepals and six stamens. : This new species has been found only in the Snake River Canyon, from 20 to 70 miles upstream from Lewiston, Idaho. The Idaho and Oregon localities are within two miles of each other, but are on opposite sides of the Snake River and are in different States. In allusion to the name of the river and canyon, the specific name has been derived from the Latin vzpera, a snake. 4. D. nemorosa L., Sp. Pl. 2: 648. 1753. D. nemorosa L., var. brevisiliqua Zapalowicz, Rozpr. Wydz. Mathem.- Pryzr. Akad. Umiej. Ser. III, 12B: 238, 1912. D. nemorosa L., var. macrocarpa Korshinsky, Tentam. Fl. Ross. Or. 37, 1898. Annual, slender or often vigorous and tall; roots fibrous; basal leaves often forming a rosette, but in small plants sparse and scarcely so doing, oblanceolate to oblong-obovate, obtuse to subacute, tapering to a short petiole, entire or with a few serrate or denticulate teeth, pubescent through- out with white forked or stellate hispid hairs, 2-25 mm. long, 1-10 mm. broad; cauline leaves several remote borne on the lower portion of the main stem, though running well up on the lateral branches, oblong-lanceo- late to elliptic-ovate, sessile usually rounded at base, serrate with a few remote teeth, hispid above with simple or two-forked hairs and below with forked or stellate hairs, 3-25 mm. long, 2-17 mm. broad; stem simple in small or depauperate plants, the larger plants producing numerous ascend- ing lateral branches from the base or lower axils, white hispid below with simple, forked, and stellate hairs, glabrate above, 2-45 cm. tall; inflores- cence at anthesis a short loose raceme, greatly elongating in fruit, in large plants the inflorescence is often several times the length of the rest of the plant, bearing 4-50 or more flowers; pedicels slender somewhat ascending or divergent, 5-25 mm. long, at least the lower usually much longer than the pods; sepals oblong-ovate yellowish, more or less simply pilose on the back, about 1.5 mm. long; petals pale yellow usually fading to whitish, oblong-spatulate narrowed to a claw below and deeply emarginate, 2.5 mm. long; stamens 6, 1.5-2 mm. long, the anthers orbicular-cordate, 0.2 mm. long, the filaments subulate; nectar glands lateral depressed conical; pods narrowly elliptic-oblong tapering to a cuneate base and an apiculate tip, puberulent with short simple ascending hairs, flat and compressed, 3-10 mm. long, 1.5-2.5 mm. broad; style wanting; stigma minute. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 107 DistrisuTion: Upper Sonoran to Arid and Humid Transition. Typr: In Sueciae nemoribus. WASHINGTON: Cascade Mts., 1882, T’weedy 164. Brenton County: Sandy shore of Columbia River, Hanford, April 7, 1927, St. John, English, Jones & Mullen 8117; gravelly beach of Columbia River, Paterson, April 9, 1927, St. John, English, Jones & Mullen 8068. CHELAN County: Damp land near mouth of Wenatchee River, April 16, 1905, Whited 2591. San Juan County: Dry rocks near Station, Friday Harbor, July 28, 1923, Peck 13152. ; ( Sxacit County: Rocky bluff, Weaverlings Spit, Anacortes, April 25, 1925, Hardin. Spokane County: Hangman Creek, 1510 feet, May 16, 1893, Sandberg & Leiberg 4; Spokane, April 20, 19138, Turesson. Watts Watta County: Bottom land, Waitsburg, March 1, April 19, May 6, 1898, Horner 608. WuitTmMan County: In dry ground, Almota, April 7, 1894, Piper; dry slopes, n. bank Palouse River, below Colfax, April 29, 1922, St. John 2975; rare, in dry ground, Pullman, May 1, 1894, Piper 1794; in dry rocky places, Pullman, May 16, 1895, Piper 1794; in dry places, Pullman, April 5, 1895, Cloud; on basaltic outcroppings, Pullman, May 1897, Elmer 151; Pullman, May, 1899, Hunter; dry soil, low ground, Pullman, April 4, 1906, Hunt & Kimmel 70; dry hillside, Rock Lake, April 9, 1925, St. John, Pickett & Warren 6884, and 6891; along Snake River at Wawawai, April 17, 1897, Piper 2800; rocky slopes of Snake River Canyon above Wilma, April 16, 1922, St. John 3309; sunny ledge, Granite Point, March 12, 1921, St. John & Pickett 2992. Yakima County: In bottoms of canyons, near springs, Rattlesnake Mts., May 7, 1902, Cotton 563. 4a. D. nemorosa L., var. leiocarpa Lindbl., Linnaea 13: 33, 1839. D. lutea Gilib., Fl. Lith. 2: 46, 1781. Differing from the species only by having glabrous pods. Distrisution: Humid Transition. Typ: Dalekarliae Suec. (Wahl- enberg et Hartman). IstanD County: Sandy bluffs, Whidby Island, April 17, 1897, Gardner 25. Kurcrirat or Yakima County: Klickitat River, June 22, 1899, Flett 1142 in part. 5. D. stenoloba Ledeb., Fl. Ross. 1: 154, 1841, D. deflexa Greene, Pittonia 4: 20, 1899. D. nitida Greene, Pl. Baker. 3: 7, 1901. Annual, usually distinctly rosulate at base; roots fibrous, branching from a distinct taproot; basal leaves on all well developed plants forming a distinct rosulate tuft, the first leaves and those on small plants obovate, —— 108 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. the later ones on large plants oblanceolate to linear-oblanceolate with a marked petiolar base, ciliate with simple hispidulous hairs, pubescent beneath with mostly branched hairs, sparsely hispid or branched pubescent above and often glabrate; cauline leaves one to several sessile elliptic or ovate lanceolate, entire or few toothed, sparsely pilose above and branched pubescent beneath; stems one, or with several secondary ones, simple or with weak axillary branches, hispidulous and forked pubescent below and glabrous above, slender, 4-35 cm. tall, the inflorescence often exceeding the leafy portion of the stem; inflorescence becoming loosely racemose, 3-40-flowered glabrous; pedicels stiff, slightly ascending, exceeded by, or all but the lower exceeded by the pods; flowering tip of the raceme small compact and cymose; sepals elliptic obovate, sparsely white pilose or branched pubescent on the back, 1-3 mm. long; petals oblanceolate emar- ginate narrowed to a slender claw, pale yellow or tipped with violet, fading to white, 2-4 mm. long; stamens 6, the anthers cordate 0.2 mm. long, the filaments subulate 2 mm. long; nectar glands lateral small and conical; pods flat compressed linear or somewhat arcuate glabrous, 10-15 mm. long, 1-2 mm. wide; style wanting. DistrisutTion: Hudsonian. Type: In ins. Unalaschka! (Chamiss., Eschsch.). WASHINGTON: Cascade Mts., 1882, Tweedy 163. CHELAN County: Stevens Pass, 3950 ft., Cascade MS, August 16, 1898, Sandberg & Letberg 758. CiaLttamM County: Olympic Mts., July 21, 1897, Flett 102. This is probably from Clallam Co., though not definitely so stated. Cotumpia County: Dry open places, Oregon Butte, T. 7 N., R. 41 E., July 23, 1918, Darlington 349. Kirritas County: Common on wet banks of streams, which flow through dense woods, Wenatchee Mts., July 1897, Elmer 434; somewhat shady places, 5300 ft., Wenatchee Mts., July 1, 1903, Cotton 1288. PEND OREILLE County: Gravelly upper slopes of Round Top Mt., June 19, 1924, St. John 6417. Yaxima County: Subalpine meadow, 6000 ft., Nile Creek, Bald Mt., July 22, 1923, St. John 7816. Wuatcom County: Grassy slopes among loose stones, 6000 ft., Mt. Baker Mining Dist., July 4, 1898, Flett 851; dry hillslope, Twin Lakes, September 4, 1927, Hardin 325. It will be seen from the synonymy that the name D. stenoloba Ledeb. is being maintained in the sense of Gray and of Piper for this yellow-flowered annual. Recently several authors have adopted other names for this species in the United States, indicating that Gray and Piper had mis- applied Ledebour’s name. Dr. E. L. Greene seems to have started this when he described D. nitida from specimens collected in the mountains of Colorado. He wrote, ‘‘The plant is one which has been referred erron- eously to D. stenoloba.” This characteristic categorical statement of Dr. Greene’s does not give any contrasting characters to separate his new species from D. stenoloba, or any explanation as to the true nature of D. sienoloba. ‘There is a duplicate type of D. nitida Greene, Baker 492, in Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 109 the Herbarium of the State College of Washington, and a duplicate type of D. stenoloba Ledeb., including both the Chamisso and E'schscholtz plants from Unalaschka, in the Gray Herbarium. It has been possible with the original descriptions in hand to compare these authentic specimens. No hint of a difference in any part of the plants could be discovered. Draba defleca was described by Dr. Greene from a collection made at Camp Stambaugh, Wyoming, by Dr. Maghee in 1878. This consists of a single plant. It has a compact rosulate tuft of leaves, and a strong central stem. This is stouter than in the specimens of D. stenoloba and the lower pedicels are conspicuously slender and deflexed. Even the first glance will reveal that this stem terminates in a heavy clavate fasciate expansion. The several secondary stems arising from the base and from the axils are a little slender, but otherwise normal. They are identical with stems of D. stenoloba and quite unlike the heavy stem with deflexed pedicels, which they surround. It is obvious, we believe, that this specimen is a monstros- ity. Annotations on the type sheet indicate that Dr. E. Gilg held the same opinion. A species based on a monstrosity is invalid, as indicated by Article 51, 3, of the International Rules. Since the above was written, Schulz’s treatment of the genus in the Pflanzenreich has come to hand. He maintains all three of the species here discussed. For D. deflexa Greene, there seems to the writers to be no possible supporting evidence. Even if the specimens from British Columbia to Colorado could be separated as a species, they could not be called D. defleca, as that was based on a single specimen, a monstrosity, and the specific name and the distinctive characters in the original description all related to this abnormal structure. As has been stated, such cases are specifically outlawed by rule. Nor can the present writers detect a second species from that area. D. stenoloba Ledeb. is maintained by Schulz only for the original col- lections by Chamisso and Eschscholtz from Unalaschka. The remaining large number of collections from the mainland are put into D. nitida Greene, and two varieties of this are made, var. nana for those with the shortest pods, and var. praelonga for those with the longest pods. These varieties seem to the writers to be merely the extremes of the normal variation, to lack any correlated characters or any natural and distinct range. No reason is seen for their maintenance. The question of a distinction between D. stenoloba and D. nitida is not so easily disposed of. For key characters the former has: Stems ascending 1-3-leaved; petals 4-4.5 mm. long; ovary with 16-20 ovules; while the latter has stems erect, 0—7-leaved; petals 1.5-4 mm. long; and the ovary with 24-44 ovules. These characters can be tested against the duplicate type of D. stenoloba, the duplicate type of D. nitida, as well as numerous collections of the latter from the western United States and Canada. Both have the first and central stem erect, and any later lateral branches ascending, so this character is not helpful. The number of cauline leaves is not contrasting even as stated by Schulz. To be sure D. stenoloba is said not to have more than 3. If more collections of this were available, it is probable that this maximum would be surpassed. The petals of the 110 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. northern D. stenoloba do seem to average larger than in the collections from further south. This also fails to hold as a sure distinction, for the writers have measured one of the other group running from 2 up to 4.2 mm. in length. D. stenoloba is said to have the ovary with 16-20 ovules, while D. nitida has from 22-44. The duplicate type of D. nitida shows 24 ovules, but Sandberg & Leiberg 758 shows 19-26; St. John 7816 shows 18-24; St. John 6417 shows 18-27; and Flett 102 shows 10-19. Hence there is no usable distinction in the number of the seeds or ovules. The actual number seems to depend on the length of the pod, that in turn on the vigor of the plant, and that probably upon the climatic conditions and the edaphic conditions of the spot where the seed of the annual happened to fall. In the descriptions of these two species, Schulz gives additional contrast- ing characters. D. stenoloba is said to be a perennial, with the sepals 2.5-3 mm. long, the petals white?, and the stamens 2.5-3 mm. long. D. nitida is said to be an annual, very rarely perennial, with the sepals 1-1.5 mm. long, the petals yellow, at length violet, and the stamens 1-1.2 mm. long. These together with the key characters make quite a formidable list. However, after a careful study of a series of specimens, these too disappear. The original specimens of the Chamisso and Hschscholtz collection seen, five plants, seem clearly to be annuals and not perennials. Of course under special conditions any annual may live over to the second season, but all of the plants in this group seem characteristic annuals. The sepals of this series vary in length all the way from 1 to 2.6mm. All old or poorly dried specimens of this group seem to have white flowers. The stamen length also falls down as a character, examples having been meas- ured all the way from 1 to 3 mm. A second detailed comparison of this group has failed to show any reason for maintaining D. deflera Greene or D. nitida Greene. 6. D. aureola Wats., Bot. Calif. 2: 430, 1880. Biennial, or according to Watson sometimes of longer duration, though no evidence to support this has been seen by the writers; roots white, long and slender, unbranched above, with fibrous lateral rootlets below; stems of the first year’s growth becoming deeply buried by the loose sliding volcanic soil; stems of the second year simple or somewhat branched, 4-10 em. high, densely leafy even up into the inflorescence, densely white hispidulous with simple and a few forked hairs; leaves often reflexed below and ascending above, so numerous and massed as to appear imbricate, narrowly spatulate, densely white forked pubescent throughout and long white ciliate, thick and fleshy with the veins scarcely visible, 5-25 mm. long, 1.5-4.5 mm. wide; racemes simple or compound, but always with a strong central one, 30—50-flowered hispidulous with white mostly forked hairs; pedicels ascending, forked or simple hispidulous, 4-8 mm. long; sepals yellowish, smooth or sparsely hispidulous; petals bright yellow and drying yellow, 4-5 mm. long, spatulate emarginate or obtuse; stamens 6 3.5-5.5 mm. long, the anthers elliptic-oblong 1 mm. long, the filaments Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 111 subulate; nectar glands lateral minute conical; pods flattened oblong- lanceolate or elliptic, densely short white forked hispidulous, 10-14 mm. long, 4-5 mm. wide, beaked with a prominent style 1-2 mm. long. Distrisution: Arctic-Alpine. It is apparently confined to fine loose voleanic soils at high elevations on Lassen Peak, Calif., Diamond Peak and the Three Sisters, Ore., and Mt. Rainier, Wash. Typr: Sierra Nevada, in Sierra County (Lemmon), and on Lassen’s Peak, Mrs. Austin. Pierce County: Alt. 10,000 ft., Mt. Rainier, August, 1889, Piper & Smith 699 (Gray Herb.); in volcanic sand, 10,000 ft. alt., Mt. Rainier, August, 1895, Pzper 2061; in rock talus, 10,000 ft. alt., Mt. Rainier, August, 1897, Flett 286; Ruth Mt., 8,700 ft. alt., August 21, 1919, Fleté 3168; dry volcanic soil, Camp Muir, 10,000 ft., Mt. Rainier, August 14, 1927, Warren 574. 7. D. cascadensis sp. nov. Perennial with a stout tap-root and numerous strong laterals; crown branching and multicipital, bearing numerous short stems that elongate each year up to the ground surface; basal leaves forming a rosette, oblance- olate narrowed to a slender petiole, remotely dentate, soft white stellate pubescent throughout, 1-2 cm. long; cauline leaves 2-6, remote, lanceolate to ovate-lanceolate remotely dentate, soft white stellate pubescent through- out and with a few hispid cilia near the base, sessile, 7-15 mm. long, 3-5 mm. wide; stems simple or branching, soft white stellate pubescent through- out and white hispid especially below, 5-10 cm. tall at anthesis, 15-18 cm. tall at maturity, stems all erect, and in old plants with many stems making a compact bushy growth; inflorescence at anthesis appearing subcapitate, soon elongating into a loose raceme 2—9 cm. long; pedicels white stellate ascending, 3-5 mm. long; lowest flower leafy bracted; sepals ovate to ovate-oblong, densely white pilose, 1.5 mm. long; petals pale yellow, oblanceolate emarginate notched, 3.5 mm. long; stamens 6, 1.5-2.5 mm. long, the anthers cordate apiculate, 0.2 mm. long, the filaments linear; nectar glands conical, lateral, i. e. on either side of the base of the two short filaments; pods linear-oblong, tapering to either end, puberulent with white stellate and simple hairs, flat and compressed, 8-12 mm. long, 1.7-2 mm. broad; style 0.1 mm. long. Perennis, caulibus foliosis, foliis utrinque pube stellata obtectis, petalis flavis 3.5 mm. longis, siliculis stellatis compressis lineari-oblongis 8-12 mm. longis, stylo 0.1 mm. longo. DistTRIBUTION: Hudsonian. Typr: St. John 6580, Glacier Peak. SnoHnomisH County: Alpine meadows, 6,500 feet alt., gneiss ridges on northwest slope of Glacier Peak, July 24, 1924, Harold St. John 6580 (type in Herb. State College of Washington). The new D. cascadensis is a member of the Section Phyllodraba as treated in O. BE. Schulz’s monograph in the Pflanzenreich. It is most closely related to D. aureiformis Rydb., or D. aurea Vahl, var. auretformis (Rydb.) O. E. Schulz as it is called in the monograph. The best distinctions seem to be the facts that D. aureiformis Rydb. has the style 0.5-1 mm. long; the 112 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. pods linear-oblong-lanceolate, 2.5-3 mm. broad; the basal leaves entire; and the cauline leaves 6-18 in number. On the other hand, D. cascadensis Payson & St. John has the style 0.1 mm. long; the pods linear-oblong tapering to each end, 1.7—-2 mm. broad; the basal leaves dentate; and the cauline leaves 2-6 in number. The specific name has been taken from the name of the Cascade Moun- tains, from the fact that the plant has been found only on one of the high peaks of that mountain range. While studying this plant, a variation of its closest relative has been discovered. ‘This may be described as: D. aureiformis Rydb., var. leiocarpa var. nov. Siliculis glabris. Differing from the species only in having the pods glabrous. Cotorapbo: Farnham, Park Co., July 11, 1891, HE. C. Smith (type in Herb. State College of Washington.) 8. D. lonchocarpa Rydb., Mem. N. Y. Bot. Gard. 1: 181, 1900. D. nivalis Liljebl., var. elongata Wats., Proc. Am. Acad. 23: 258,1888. Perennial tufted and caespitose; roots slender and whitish, tap-root long and slender, lateral ones delicate; in old plants the crown branches into several short stems, each crowned with a dense rosulate mass of leaves, and these massed into a tuft; basal leaves obovate to oblanceolate or oblong-oblanceolate, tapering to a broadly winged petiole, closely imbricate, hoary with long white stellate pubescence on all parts readily visible, but ciliate near the base with long white hispid hairs, and with simple white pilose hairs on the middle and basal portions of the upper sur- face, 4-7 mm. long, 2-3 mm. broad; cauline leaves wanting on all specimens examined though occasionally present (fide Schulz); stems scapose, glabrous or with a few stellate hairs near the base, slender, 2—9 cm. tall; inflorescence glabrous, becoming a loose raceme, 2—8-flowered; pedicels slender glabrous, strongly ascending, 2-7 mm. long; sepals elliptic, white pilose near the tip, 2-2.5 mm. long; petals with an obovate blade, slightly or definitely emarginate, white, the claw tapering and slender, slightly shorter than the blade, petals 3.5-4 mm. long; stamens 6, 2-3 mm. long, the anther broadly ellipsoid 0.3 mm. long, the filament linear; nectar glands lateral and conical; pods linear compressed, usually twisted glabrous, 10-15 mm. long, 1 mm. broad; style 0.2-0.3 mm. long; stigma flat. DistriBuTion: Hudsonian. Type: Rocky Mountains, from British America to Washington, Wyoming and the Uintas. PEND OREILLE County: Crevices of limestone cliffs, Z-Canyon, June 23, 1924, St. John 6468. Pizrce County: Owyhigh, 5,800 ft. alt., Mt. Rainier, August 9, 1919, Flett. Skamania County: Chiquash Mts., at 6,000 or 7,000 ft. alt., August 26, 1895, Suksdorf 2541. Wuatcom County: Mt. Baker Mining Dist., alt. 6,000 ft., July 20, 1898, Flett 856. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 118 All of the specimens studied have naked scapes. Such plants will not run down in Schulz’s key in his monograph in the Pflanzenreich. He puts D. lonchocarpa under the heading, ‘‘Caules floriferi-foliosi.”” 'To be _ sure, in his description of the Section Leucodraba and the Subsection Euleucodraba, allowance is made for occasional leafless stems, but there is no such provision in the key. In the Pacific Northwest this leafless condition seems to be constant, not a mere rare variation. 8a. D. lonchocarpa Rydb., var. semitonsa var. nov. Differing from the species by having the pods short puberulent on the margins, and the petals drying yellowish. Siliculis ad marginem puberulis, petalis flavescentibus. DistrisuTion: Arctic-Alpine. Typ: Piper 2060. Pierce County: In volcanic sand, 9,000 ft. alt., Mt. Rainier, August, 1895, Piper 2060 (type in Herb. State College of Washington); dry rocky soil, 8,500 ft., Mt. Rainier, June 25, 1926, Warren 512; rocky cliff, Indian Henry’s, Crystal Mt., Mt. Rainier, July 2, 1928, Warren 753; rocky ledges near top, Iron Mt., Mt. Rainier, June 17, 1928, Warren 864. The Piper specimen was studied and commented on by Schulz in his monograph (1. c. 215). He stated that it approached var. dasycarpa through its fruits which were sparsely pilose on the margins. The fact that it has again been collected on the same mountain, and that it occurs at higher elevations, seems to entitle it to varietal rank. The var. dasy- carpa which has the siliques densely pubescent with simple, forked and stellate hairs, is known only from Laggan in the Canadian Rockies. 8b. D. lonchocarpa Rydb., var. vestita O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 216, 1927. Differs from the species by having its stem and pedicels densely stellate pubescent. Distripution: Arctic-Alpine. Type: Alaska und Kanada, i. e., Virgin Bay, Trelease & Saunders 3913; Mt. Arrowsmith, Macoun 1929. Wuatcom County: Alpine slate ledges, 6,700 ft., Grouse Ridge, Mt. Baker, August 8, 1923, St. John 5123. The majority of the specimens in this collection have from 1-2 cauline leaves on the scapes. These are small, ovate dentate and sessile, 2-6 mm. long. 9. D. novolympica sp. nov. Perennial, the root unknown; densely caespitose from the numerous short dichotomous branches at the surface of the ground, these slender cylindric from the persisting mass of old leaves, 2-3 cm. long; leaves narrowly linear-oblanceolate to almost linear, entire thick and coriaceous, the single nervesomewhat prominent beneath, prominently white ciliate through- out with hispid simple or forked hairs 0.7—-0.9 mm. long, pubescent beneath with loose white forked or some stellate hairs, less so above, 4-5 mm. long, 0.5-0.8 mm. wide, ascending and the tips incurved; scapes slender, white 114. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. hispid with mostly forked hairs, 1-10 mm. tall; inflorescence short and subcymose even in fruit, hispid with white mostly forked hairs, 3—8-flowered; pedicels ascending, white hispid with mostly forked hairs; sepals unequal, yellowish and hyaline margined, hispid with mostly forked hairs, obovate to oblong, 2.5 mm. long, 1.5 mm. wide; petals yellow, oblanceolate, nar- rowed to a short claw just above the broader base, obtuse and entire, 3-3.5 mm. long, 1.5 mm. wide; stamens 6, 2—2.5 mm. long, the anthers oblong-lanceolate, cordate at base, 0.5 mm. long, the filaments subulate with a deltoid base; the nectar glands lateral pyramidal and prominent, connected by a low continuous ridge into a hippocrepiform structure; pods flat compressed, rough hispid with short stiff forked hairs, acute and ovate- lanceolate but distinctly lop-sided, 2-6-ovuled, 2-5 mm. long, 1.2-2.7 mm. broad; style stout, 0.1-0.3 mm. long, the stigma discoid and prominent; seeds (immature) brown wingless, 1.4 mm. long. Perennis caespitosa, foliis anguste lineari-oblanceolatis integris coriaceis ciliatis utrinque pilis furcatis hispidis, scapis gracilibus 1-10 mm. altis, petalis luteis oblanceolatis 3-3.5 mm. longis, siliculis compressis ovato- lanceolatis 2-5 mm. longis, stylo 0.1-0.3 mm. longo. Distripution: Arctic-Alpine. Typr: Flett 844. Oxtympic Mountains: Rocky summits, shale, etc., alt. 6,000 ft., August 28, 1898, J. B. Flett 844 (type in Herb. State College of Washington). Yakima Reaion: In 1882, 7. S. Brandegee 373 in part (Herb. Univ. Calif.). The new D. novolympica is a member of the Section Chrysodraba accordin to the classification in O. E. Schulz’s monograph in the Pflanzenreich. It most closely resembles a species of Greenland, Spitzbergen, and arctic Eurasia, D. pauciflora R. Br., var. hebecarpa (Pohle & N. Busch) O. E. Schulz. This arctic plant may be recognized by its leaves oblong-elliptic 5-7 mm. long, ciliate with simple hairs; the scape 5-50 mm. tall, hirsute with simple hairs 0.75 mm. long and with shorter forked hairs; the sepals 1.2-2 mm. long, hirsute; the petals 1.5-2.5 mm. long; the stamens 1.2—2 mm. long; and the ovules 12-16. D. novolympica Payson & St. John may be distinquished by its leaves narrowly linear-oblanceolate, 4-5 mm. long, ciliate with simple and forked hairs; the scape 1-10 mm. tall, hispid with mostly forked hairs 0.5 mm. long; the sepals 2.5 mm. long, hispid with mostly forked hairs; the petals 3-3.5 mm. long; the stamens 2—2.5 mm. long; and the ovules 2-6. The specific name is coined from the name of the mountains where the type collection was made. ‘The type sheet contains but one fruiting tuft. The Brandegee collection contains two plants in flower and fruit. Hence, the description of the floral parts was taken from this cotype material. As far as the plants are concerned this collection would have made a better type specimen than the one so designated. Unfortunately this Brandegee 373 contains a mixture of several species, presumably of several different collections. The sheet of it from the Brandegee Herbarium, now in the Herbarium of the University of California includes two plants of the new D. novolympica, one plant of D. Nelson Macbr. & Payson, and five plants of D. incerta Payson, var. laevicapsula (Payson) Payson & St. John. The Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 115 sheet of it in the Rocky Mountain Herbarium contains specimens of D. Nelsonii and of D. Paysonit Macbr. It is obvious that nothing but confusion would result from designating as the type a numbered collection that includes such a heterogeneous mixture as does this one. 10. D. Douglasii Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 7: 328, 1868. Cusickia Douglasti Gray in synon., Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 17: 199, 1882; O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 12, 341, 1927; not Cusickia of M. E. Jones. Braya oregonensis Gray, Proc. Am. Acad. Arts Sci. 17: 199, 1882. Perennial; stems stout and woody, freely branching at or near the surface, more or less clothed with marcescent leaf-bases; leaves pale green, thick and rigid, ciliate with weak simple hairs, glabrous above, weakly more or less appressed pilose beneath, 1-ribbed, the lower oblanceolate, the upper oblanceolate-linear to nearly linear, 3-10 mm. long, 0.5-2 mm. broad; aerial stems short subequal, giving a low tufted appearance to the plant, densely leafy at the tips and clothed with partially decayed leaf bases below; the naked subscapose stem tips very short, exceeded by the leaves, or slightly exceeding them, sparsely white pilose with somewhat matted simple hairs; inflorescence 5—8-flowered small, compact at anthesis, only slightly elongating in fruit, white pilose, the pedicels 1-7 mm. long; flowers 4-5 mm. long; sepals elliptic concave green glabrous, 3 mm. long; petals white oblanceolate-spatulate clawed, 4-5 mm. long, 1 mm. broad; stamens 6, 3-4 mm. long, the anthers oblong, 0.6 mm. long, the filaments subulate; nectar glands lateral closed 6-angled hollowed, these joined with the median ones; pods subovoid scarcely flattened, rigid and coriaceous, white appressed puberulent, 4-5 mm. long, 2—2.5 mm. broad, tipped with a rigid style 1-2 mm. long; ovules 2-4 in each cell pendent, seeds 1-2 in a cell, large smooth and shining nearly filling the cavity. DistripuTion: Upper Sonoran. Typr: Douglas’s collection in the in- terior of Oregon or California. KuickiTat County: Klickitat hills, May, 1895, Howell 50. The fact that Dr. Gray named this species under three different genera of Cruciferae is a good indication of its anomalous character. The name Cusickia appeared only in synonymy. It was chosen and then communi- cated to W. C. Cusick, who had made a collection of the plant. Cusick distributed a number of specimens under this name. By the time he was ready to publish, Dr. Gray changed his mind, and called the plant Braya oregonensis, citing the name Cusickia in synonymy to indicate that he had abandoned the idea of describing it as a separate genus. It appears that he had already described the plant from a different part of its range as Draba Douglasii, and overlooked this fact when it was sent to him the second time. When completing volume one, part one, of Gray’s Synoptical Flora, Dr. B. L. Robinson discovered that Dr. Gray had described the plant under the two different genera. It seemed to belong in the genus Draba, so the earlier name was adopted in that work. 116 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. O. E. Schulz in his recent monograph of Draba lists D. Douglasii in the Species excludendae. He refers it to Cusickia Douglasit Gray, though Gray published this name only in synonymy. On page 12 Schulz lists the characters that separate Cusickia from Draba. These are, when translated, the following: (1) small boat-shaped sepals; (2) petals rounded at the tip; (3) closed lateral six-angled nectaries, which are joined with the median ones; (4) valves of the pod hard; (5) seeds smooth shining few and large, filling the aperture of the cells. When these characters are compared with those of the genus Draba, either including or excluding Hrophila, it will be obvious that nos. 1 and 2 are of no diagnostic value. The subovoid hard pods are somewhat aberrant for Draba and suggestive of Camelina, but Schulz retains in Draba a number of species with inflated pods, as D. sphaerocarpa Macbr. & Payson. The rigidity of texture of the valves is a relative matter, and does not seem to the writers to be of generic value. Of the characters listed under (5), only the large size of the seeds seems worth discussing. When seeds are of the same nature, of the same manner of attachment, the mere fact that they grow larger in proportion in one species, would not seem to necessitate making that species a genus. Item no. (3) seems most important. The characters provided by the nectaries situated on either side of the base of the filaments have not been generally used in these genera, but they may well be of fundamental taxonomic value. On page 6 Schulz describes the nectaries as they occur in Draba, as restricted by him. They are lateral or median or both and fused into a ring, as well as many other forms. If all these types of nectaries are to be allowed in Draba, there seems no good reason for setting aside the one type described above. The genus Draba seems to the writers the best and most logical place for this species. In any case the generic name Cusickia can not be used for this group, since it became a homonym before it was adequately described. In 1908 M. E. Jones! used the same name C'uszckia for a genus of the Umbelliferae, which he published with a detailed description. It included the single species C’. minor Jones. Hence the generic name Cusickia of Gray can not now be revived and legalized by the addition of a description. 11. D. Nelsonii Macbride and Payson, Am. Journ. Bot. 4: 259, 1917. D. densifolia Nutt., f. Nelsonit (Macbr. & Pays.) O. E. Schulz, Pflanzen- reich IV, fam. 105: 103, 1927. Caespitose tufted perennial; root a strong dark vertical tap-root, not branching near the surface; crown multicipital at the surface, producing many short slender stems, these scaly below with the marcescent fragments of old leaves, and crowned with a cylindrical mass of erect or incurved rigid leaves; leaves all basal, linear thick acute cuspidate, the midrib prom- inent beneath, strongly ciliate with remote white stiff hispid hairs, other- wise glabrous, 5-7 mm. long, less than 1 mm. wide; scapes slender erect, sparsely pubescent below with simple or forked hispidulous hairs or gla- brous, 1-4 cm. tall; inflorescence 4—9-flowered, in fruit forming a short 1Contrib. W. Bot. 12:39-40. 1908. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 117 compact raceme, pedicels glabrous ascending, 2-5 mm. long; sepals greenish ovate-elliptic sparsely pilose with simple or forked hairs on the back or usually glabrous, 3-3.5 mm. long; petals yellow obovate, slightly cuneate at base, obtuse, 4-5 mm. long: stamens 6, 2—2.5 mm. long, the anthers elliptic to subcordate 0.3 mm. long, the filaments subulate; nectar glands large, the lateral ones deltoid, connected by the median ones to form two hippocrepiform ridges; pods flat and compressed, broadly and asymmetri- cally lanceolate, white puberulent with simple and forked hairs, 3-6 mm. long, 2-3 mm. broad; style 0.6-1 mm. long. DistripuTion: Hudsonian. Type: Idaho: Exposed alpine summit, Antelope Mts., near Martin, Blaine Co., July 6, 1916, Macbride & Payson 3077. WasuHineton: Cascade Mts., 1882, Brandegee 373 in part. Yakima County: Scab rock, summit of Bald Mt., 6,100 ft. alt., head of branch of Nile Creek, July 22, 1923, St. John 7851. O. E. Schulz has reduced! this species to a forma under D. densifolia Nutt. He follows Macbride? in making D. Mulfordae Payson a synonym of D. densifolia Nutt. D. densifolia, however, has as conspicuous characters, stellate hairs on the leaves and the style 1.5-2 mm. long. Because of these and other characters, the writers are unable to concur with Schulz’s reduction of D. Nelsoniz to the rank of a forma. Schulz assigns D. Nelsonii to a place in the Section Chrysodraba. This section is defined so that the present species is adequately included, as well as many other species of very diverse habit and character. The key, on the other hand, does not make the same impression. The choice comes between: ‘Folia rigida, angusta. Funiculi elongati. Folia mollia, latiora, rarissime rigidula.” One would scarcely seek for a plant with linear rigid leaves under the second division. 12. D. ruaxes sp. nov. Perennial, the subterranean branches freely branching and forming a caespitose tuft at the surface; lateral roots slender and fibrous, the prin- cipal roots deeply buried and not known; stems of each year’s growth quickly buried by the loose sliding volcanic rocks, the leaf bases marcescent and long persistent, each stem bearing at the surface a small compact rosette of leaves; leaves all basal, oblanceolate to suborbicular sessile or subsessile densely white pilose with simple and forked hairs, hispid ciliate towards the base, thick and firm in texture, 3-7 mm. long, 2-4 mm. wide; aerial stems scapose slender, pilose with mostly simple hairs, 1-5 cm. tall; in- florescence small, but compact and subcapitate even in fruit, 3—-6-flowered; pedicels very short at anthesis, but becoming 3-4 mm. long, ascending, loosely white pilose; flowers 3-4 mm. long; sepals ovate or ovate-lanceolate, scarious margined, white pilose with simple hairs, 2.5-3 mm. long; petals bright yellow, blade suborbicular broadly emarginate 3.5 mm. broad 1L. c. 103. 2Contrib. Gray Herb. n. s. 56: 52-53, 1918. 118 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. narrowed to a short claw; stamens 6, 3.5-4 mm. long, the anthers elliptic to oblong 0.4 mm. long, the filaments linear; nectar glands lateral large and triangular; pods ovate elliptic flattened, hispidulous with white simple hairs, 5-8 mm. long, 3-4 mm. broad, ovules about 18; style 0.7 mm. long. Perennis scaposa, foliis omnibus radicalibus oblanceolatis vel suborbi- cularibus pilosis, scapis pilosis 1-5 cm. altis, floribus subcapitatis luteis, siliculis ovato ellipticis hispidulis, stylo 0.7 mm. longo. DistTRiBuTION: Arctic Alpine. Typs: Si. John 6590. SnoHomisH County: Crevices of disintegrating flaky andesite, 8,000 ft. alt., north side of Glacier Peak, Washington, July 24, 1924, Harold St. John 6590 (type in Herb. State College of Washington). British Cotumpia: Cliffs of Mt. Chris Spencer, 9,000 ft. alt., Coast Range Mts., lat. 51 degrees, July 7, 1928, Mrs. Don Munday 88 (Hb. Prov. Mus. B. C.); on cliffs, Fury Gap, 8,500 ft., July 6, 1928, Munday 21 (1) (Hb. Prov. Mus. B. C.). The collector has a vivid recollection of the locality where this plant was found. He led an expedition in to explore the unknown north side of this beautiful snow-capped volcano. From the main camp on the White- chuck River, two days of arduous back-packing established a high camp at 5500 feet in the open alpine meadows near the head of Fire Creek. On July 24th the attempt was made with Dr. J. R. Neller to climb Glacier Peak. The ascent was only 5000 feet and the distance not over five miles, and the route looked easy along a continuous ridge. Closer acquaintance with the area, however, revealed knife-edge ridges, clifis, steeply sloping snow fields, and glaciers deeply cut by crevasses. Twelve hours of con- tinuous climbing found the party still 500 feet from the summit, and the fear of darkness caused a retreat. At a spot near the 8,000 foot level, a series of cliffs caused the climbers to leave the ridge and skirt its side above the Kennedy Glacier. To reach the ridge again, it was necessary to climb up through a steep gully. Here the andesitic lava was shattered in a very peculiar way. It was broken into flat flakes about the size and shape of a person’s hand. They were in a vertical position and stacked in loosely like cards. Each step started a landslide down the precipitous gully and threatened to take the climber with it. Between the loose flakes of this lava grew the perennial bright yellow Draba here described as new. The specific name is taken from the Greek pat, meaning a volcano. The closest relative of this new species is D. ventosa Gray, described from Parry 15, collected at Snake Pass, Wyoming, in 1873. This may be distinguished by having its pods acute at apex, pubescent with slender stellate hairs; the sepals stellate pubescent; the scapes densely slender stellate; and the leaves densely slender white stellate or forked pubescent on both sides. On the other hand, D. ruaxes has the pods not acute at apex, short hispid; the sepals pilose with simple hairs; and the leaves pilose with simple and forked hairs. D. Howellit Wats. and D. sobolifera Rydb. have been treated as synonyms of D. veniosa Gray by Payson in his mono- graph.! Even if these variants should prove worthy of separation, they are easily distinguished from D. ruazes. D. Howellii is sparingly stellate 1Am. Journ. Bot. 4: 264, 1917. Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 119 throughout, with pedicels 6-11 mm. long, with petals 6-8 mm. long, and with the style 2 mm. long. D. sobolifera has the pedicels 7-8 mm. long, and the pods finely stellate. This new species may also be compared with D. uncinalis Rydb. but this has pods 3 mm. wide and 3-4 mm. long, and the basal leaves sparingly stellate. D. ruazes falls into the Section Chrysodraba of Schulz’s treatment. 13. D. caeruleomontana sp. nov. Caespitose perennial; tap root slender and vertical, the lateral roots deep seated; branches slender straw colored numerous ascending, leafy up to the rosette but not densely so and not appearing pulvinate; leaves all basal linear or very slightly spatulate rigid slightly divergent, the mid- rib prominent beneath, sparsely pubescent above and below with mostly stellate hispid hairs, ciliate throughout with remote rigid white hispid hairs 0.7-1 mm. long, acute and cuspidate, 0.8-1.8 cm. long, 1-1.5 mm. broad; scapes sparsely hispid below with simple and a few forked hairs, glabrate above, 5-16 cm. tall; inflorescence loose, markedly so at fruiting time, glabrate, 10-20 flowered; pedicels glabrous slender ascending, 3-25 mm. long; sepals oblong ovate yellowish green, hispid on the back with simple and forked hairs, the outer pair broader, 3-4 mm. long; petals yellow with a suborbicular shallowly emarginate blade, narrowed to a short broad claw, 4-5.5 mm. long, 3 mm. broad; stamens 6, 3-4 mm. long, the anthers broadly oblong to suborbicular 0.8-0.9 mm. long, the filaments subulate large and dilated below; nectar glands lateral large triangular and pyra- midal; pods flat compressed glabrous, elliptic lanceolate to ovate lanceolate, many nerved, about 10-ovuled, 4-7 mm. long, 2-3 mm. broad; style 0.5- 0.8 mm. long; seeds brown ovoid wingless, 1.3 mm. long. Perennis, foliis rosulatis linearibus hispido-ciliatis sparse stellatis, 7-18 mm. longis 1—-1.5 mm. latis, scapis sparse hispidis superne glabratis 10-20- floris, petalis luteis suborbicularibus emarginatis 4-5.5 mm. longis, gland- ulis deltoideis magnis, siliculis compressis elliptico-lanceolatis 4-7 mm. longis, 2-3 mm. latis, stylo 0.5-0.8 mm. longo. DisTRiBuTION: Htidsonian. Typrr: Brode 3. Cotumpia County: Bare basalt crevices, 6025 ft. alt., summit of Table Rock, T. 6 N., R. 39 E., September 23, 1928, St. John, Moore, Smith & Van Amburg 9652. WatitA WatuaA County: Rock crannies, 5,000 ft. alt., Lewis Peak, Blue Mts., May 27-29, 1923, M. D. Brode 3 (type in Herb. State College of Washington); in rock crevices, alt. 4,500 ft., Blue Mts., July, 1896, Piper 2404 in part. D. caeruleomontana Payson & St. John is a member of the Section Chrys- odraba according to the treatment by O. E. Schulz, though it will run there in his key only with difficulty and only after the elimination of the Section Aizopsis. In this monograph it would come next to D. globosa Payson, though it most closely resembles D. laevicapsula Payson. The latter species may be distinguished by having the leaves 7-10 mm. long, usually obtuse, not rigid, pubescence loosely stellate with weak marginal cilia near 120 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. the base; the inflorescence 2 cm. long in fruit. D. caeruleomontana has the leaves 8-18 mm. long, acute rigid, stellate hairs sparse and hispid, with strong hispid cilia throughout; the inflorescence 5-13 cm. long in fruit. 13a. D. caeruleomontana Payson and St. John, var. Piperi var. nov. It differs from the species by having the pods densely white puberulent with simple and forked hairs. A specie differt in siliculis puberulis. Distrisution: Hudsonian. Typrm: Piper 2404 in part. Watta Watia County: In rock crevices, alt. 4,500 ft., Blue Mts., July, 1896, C. V. Piper 2404 in part (type in Herb. State College of Wash- ington.) This new variety most closely resembles D. denszfolia Nutt. (D. Mulfordae Payson), which ean be recognized by having the leaves obtuse, not rigid, 5-10 mm. long, 1-2 mm. broad; the sepals 2.5-3 mm. long; and the style 1-2mm.long. D.caeruleomontana, var. Piperi differs by having the leaves acute rigid, 8-18 mm. long, 1-1.5 mm. wide; the sepals 3-4 mm. long; and the style 0.5-0.8 mm. long. 14. D. Paysonii Macbr., Contrib. Gray Herb. n. s. 56: 52, 1918. D. vestita Payson, Am. Journ. Bot. 4: 261, 1917, not Davidson. D. densifolia Schulz in part, Pflanzenreich, IV, fam. 105: 103, 1927. Densely caespitose perennial; crown multicipital, producing many short stems, these densely clothed with a cylindrical mass of marcescent leaves; leaves all basal, broadly linear to narrowly oblanceolate thin, not rigid, ascending appressed and imbricate, soft pubescent with long hairs, these simple branched or stellate, long ciliate with white hispid hairs, often glabrate above especially towards the base, 5-12 mm. long, 1-13 mm. broad; scapes erect long pilose with simple and forked hairs, 1-3 em. tall; inflorescence short compact and corymbose even in fruit, 3-6 flowered; pedicels pilose with simple and forked hairs, 1-5 mm. long; sepals broadly elliptic densely pilose on the back with simple and forked hairs, 3-4 mm. long; petals yellow obovate slightly emarginate, narrowed to a short slender claw, 3-4 mm. long; stamens 6, 1.5-2.5 mm. long, the anthers oblong 0.5-0.7 mm. long, the filaments subulate and dilated at the point of attachment; nectar glands large, the lateral deltoid and pyramidal, connected by the median into a hippocrepiform shape; pods flat compressed lance-ovate, densely white pilose with mostly simple hairs, 5-8 mm. long, 2.5-4 mm. broad; style 0.5-1 mm. long; seeds 8-10, dark brown, 1 mm. long. DistTRiBuTION: Hudsonian or Arctic:-Alpine. Type: Upper Marias Pass, August 3, 1883, Canby 28. WasHINGTON: Cascade Mts., 1882, Brandegee 373 in part. Skamania County: At 6,000 cr 7,000 ft. alt., Chiquash Mts., August 26, 1895, Suksdorf 2426. This specimen differs somewhat from the typical plants in having its leaves somewhat longer more rigid more divergent and the pubescence sparser. However, these points seem to be within Payson and St. John—Washington Species of Draba. 121 the normal range of variation and the specimen seems properly included within this species. It has been carefully compared with the type specimen. O. E. Schulz lists D. Paysontt in the synonymy of D. globosa Payson, var. sphaerula (Macbride and Payson) Schulz. The various characters detailed in the above description will show why the writers do not concur with Schulz’s treatment. 15. D. incerta Payson, Am. Journ. Bot. 4: 261, 1917. D. oligosperma Hook., var. pilosa (Regel) Schulz, in part, Pflanzen- reich IV, fam. 105: 101, 1927. Perennial, caespitose and loosely tufted; tap-root slender and rather freely branching; caudex multicipital, producing numerous slender some- what spreading short branches, these scaly from the marcescent petiole bases; leaves all basal, bright green, linear oblanceolate, not rigid, stellate with weak slender hairs throughout and ciliate towards the base with weak short pilose simple hairs, in age more or less glabrate on the upper surface towards the base, 7-10 mm. long, 2-4 mm. wide; scapes sparsely pilose with slender stellate hairs, 4-12 cm. tall; inflorescence 3-14-flowered, in fruit becoming a loose raceme; pedicels rather stout, ascending sparsely stellate and glabrate, 3-15 mm. long; sepals unequal elliptic ovate, sac- cate at base, yellowish, sparsely pilose on the back, 3 mm. long; petals yellow oblanceolate truncate, 5 mm. long; stamens 6, 2.5-3 mm. long, the anthers elliptic 0.5 mm. long; nectar glands lateral conical in shape; pods flat and compressed broadly lanceolate, white puberulent with stellate and mostly simple hairs, 4-8 mm. long, 2-3 mm. broad; style 0.5-0.9 mm. long; seeds about 20, neither winged nor margined. DistTRiBuTION: Hudsonian. Type: Wyoming: among rocks on the summit, the Thunderer, Yellowstone Park, July 13, 1899, A. Nelson & E. Nelson 5818. WasHINGToN: Cascade Mts., 1882, Brandegee 371; Cascade Mts., Lyall in 1860. CHELAN County: One tuft on mica schist ridge, Indian Head Peak, 7,000 ft. alt., Valley of the White River, July 31, 1921, St. John 4840. Yakima County: Small volcano at base of Mt. Adams, July 12, 1899, Flett 1131. The Lyall specimen cited above may or may not be the same as one of the three cited by O. E. Schulz under the D. oligosperma aggregate. The specimen in the Gray Herbarium gives no elevation, while that seen by Schulz in the Kew Herbarium had the elevation stated. 15a. D. incerta Payson, var. laevicapsula (Payson) comb. nov. D. laevicapsula Payson, Am. Journ. Bot. 4: 262, 1917. Further study has shown the close relationship of this plant to D. incerta. In fact, it seems to differ only by the lack of any pubescence on the capsules. It is somewhat less frequent, but occurs within the range of the species. As previously stated in the discussion of similar cases, one of the pair is considered a variety of the other. 122 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. DisTRIBUTION: Hudsonian. Type: Idaho: summit of Steven’s Peak, Coer D’Alene Mts., August 5, 1895, Letberg 1477 (Rocky Mt. Herb.). Yakima Reeion: In 1882, Brandegee 373 in part (Hb. U. Calif.). DOUBTFUL RECORDS Draba barbata Pohle, var. Treleasiz (Gilg) O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 102, 1927. Wasnincton: Yakima Region (Brandegee, 1882). This is undoubtedly one of the collections made on the Northern Trans- continental Survey, in connection with the Northern Pacific Railway. Search has been made for this in vain in the Herbarium of the New York State College of Pharmacy, and in the U. S. National Herbarium. Col- lections from this set were seen in the Rocky Mountain Herbarium and in the Herbarium of the University of California. Each contained two sheets, nos. 371 and 373. The former number included one species, and the latter four species, none of which answer to the description of D. barbata, var. Treleasti. While awaiting confirmation, this plant is listed among those doubtfully present in the State of Washington. Draba oligosperma Hook., var. andina Nutt., f. hirtiscapa O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 100, 1927. Orrcon: Ostseite der Cascade Mts., auf den Gipfeln, 49° n. Br., 2,500 m. ti. M. (Lyall, Oreg. Bound. Commiss. 1860). Many specimens of this plant have been examined from the Wallowa and the Rocky Mountains, including two of Lyall’s, but none from the Cascade Mountains of Washington. No sheet of this could be found among the Lyall duplicates in the Gray Herbarium. D. oligosperma look., var. pilosa (Regel) O. E. Schulz, Pflanzenreich IV, fam. 105: 101, 1927. Orrcon: Ostseite der Cascade Mts. auf den Bergspitzen 49° n. Br., 2,500 m. ti. M. (Lyall, Oreg. Bound. Commiss. 1859, auch subvar. leiocarpa, hb. Kew). ‘This record is difficult to interpret. Schulz does not publish, list, describe, or index any subvar. letocarpa of D. oligosperma. ‘The specimen cited above is listed under var. pilosa, but it, like the majority of other specimens, is indicated as subvar. letocarpa. On page 99 there is a var. letocarpa Schulz, but these same specimens are not listed under that variety. If the statement subvar. is to be interpreted as referring the reader to look under var. leiocarpa, at least the typographi- cal error occurs eight times in the same paragraph. Also on page 100 Schulz refers several plants to var. leiocarpa without using the “‘sub”. No specimen of this collection could be found in the Gray Herbarium, and the published record is too involved to be accepted without verification. Vol. 43, pp. 123-124 June 13, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON A NEW SPECIES OF FULVETTA FROM YUNNAN, ae, CHINA BY J. H. RILEY.! Among the birds recently brought back by Doctor Joseph F. Rock, from exploring the high mountains of Yunnan and Szechwan under the auspices of the Natiohal Geographic Society, is an apparently unnamed specie of Fulvetta, a genus of small timaline birds inhabiting the high mountains of India and China. It may be known from the following description: Fulvetta insperata, sp. nov. Type.—Adult male, U. S. National Museum, No. 314,150, Nda-much’o, 14,000 feet, northwest Yunnan, October, 1929. Collected by Joseph F. Rock (original No. 1573). Similar to Fulvetta ruficapilla sordidior, but pileum deep brownish drab, instead of light mars brown; no whitish around the eye; inner primaries and outer secondaries edged externally basally with buckthorn brown instead of sudan brown; rump and the base of the rectrices a much lighter brown; throat more heavily streaked with dusky; bill wholly black, instead of the base being lighter; feet considerably heavier. Description.—Pileum deep brownish drab, bordered on each side above the superciliary line and commencing just over the eye, by a black line extending on to the upper back; the superciliary, lores, ear-coverts, and cheeks, light drab; throat pale drab-gray with rather broad dusky streaks; chest and breast, light drab; belly a little lighter than the breast; flanks and under tail-coverts, buckthorn brown; back, hair-brown; lower back scapulars and rump, buckthorn brown; tail, dark mouse gray, the outer feathers fringed externally basally with the color of the rump; wing-coverts deep mouse gray edged outwardly with the color of the rump; primaries and secondaries deep mouse gray, the four outer primaries edged outwardly with light olive-gray, the inner primaries, commencing with the seventh, and the secondaries edged externally basally with buckthorn brown; under wing-coverts and inner margins of the remiges basally, white; bill (in the 1Published with the permission of the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. 16—Proc. Brot. Soc. Wasx., Vou. 43, 1930. (123) 124 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. skin) dull black; feet, blackish brown. Wing, 61; tail, 58; culmen, 9.5; tarsus, 24; middle-toe, 13 mm. Remarks.—The U. 8. National Museum contains eight specimens of F. r. sordidior and all of the specimens, that are unstained around the head, have a narrow white line above the eye and below it, but not meeting behind. Fulvetta insperata does not show a trace of an eye-ring. In F. r. sordidior the black line bordering the pileum on each side extends further forwards. Dr. Rock’s men took both Fr. sordzdior and the present bird at the same locality, otherwise | should have considered them only forms of the same species. This can hardly be Fulvetta manipurensis Grant from Manipur, though judging from the inadequate description of the original describer and that of Stuart Baker (Fauna Br. Ind., Birds, ed. 2, vol. I, 1922, p. 292) it is apparently closely related. The latter compares it with F. vintpecta, however, while F. insperata resembles F. ruficapilla more closely. Only the type was secured. yr 0 Iw yw Vol. 43, pp. 125-128 June 13, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON <-> TWO NEW GENERIC NAMES AND THREE NEW SPECIES OF MALLOPHAGA. BY H. BE. EWING. Attention is here called to two generic names of Mallophaga that are preoccupied in other groups, and descriptions are here given of three new species. These new species are, for the most part, rather unusual in certain anatomical structures, and will be studied further later. Uchida, new name. The genus Neumannia Uchida was established in 1926 (Jour. Col. Agr. Imp. Univ. Tokyo, vol. IX, No. 1, p. 27) to include a number of species of Menoponidae. This name had already been used by Trouessart (1888) for a genus of Acarina. I suggest the name of Uchida to take its place, this name being given in honor of the author of the genus, a taxonomist who has done much to clear up the confusion of generic relationships in the Menoponidae. Cummingsiella, new name. Cummings established in 1916 (Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1916, p. 675) the genus Dollabella for a species of Philopteridae, D. testudinarius (Denny), living on Numenius. Dr. E. A. Chapin has called the writer’s attention to the fact that this name is preoccupied. It was used by Gistel in 1848 for a genus of mollusks. I suggest the name Cummingsiella to take its place. Tetrophthalmus transitans, new species. Head slightly broader than long; temples broadly rounded. Expansions of the head above antennal fossae each traversed by a deep gash for its entire width. Occipital setae, six, subequal, arranged in a transverse row. Antennae short; last segment a sphere with a short pedicel. Right mandible with two powerful hooks, left with but a single large hook, both with a few smaller teeth. Palpi extending beyond the margins of the head by the full length of the last two segments; last segment cylindrical, not swollen. 17—Proc. Brox. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (125) ~*~ “~Saee 8 ——_— —_ ~~ eS ee 126 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. Thorax longer than head, broadest at its posterior margin and narrowest at the junction of the pro- with mesothorax. Prothorax almost as broad as the head and broadest at its anterior margin; each lateral apex with 3-4 spines; prosternite small, oval, about one and three-fourths times as long as wide, margins poorly sclerotized. The prosternite bears about two dozen subequal setae. Mesothorax separated from metathorax by a lateral notch and an incomplete dorsal suture. It is much smaller than the meta- thorax and is provided with a small and rather indistinct sternite which bears a patch of subequal setae. Metathorax with divided tergite, a row of dorsal setae along the posterior margin and a few lateral ones; meta- sternite large, shieldshape, lateral margins unthickened and studded with- short setae. Abdomen with all nine segments very distinct and none reduced. Spir- acles very large, circular, subequal, each situated in tergite, approximate to lateral margin of same and each flanked on its inside by a large, circular pore. These accessory pores are as large as the spiracles of most biting lice. Each of the first four spiracles of a side is flanked postero-laterally by a seta, which is larger than the others near to it, and is probably sensory. Pleural plates small, triangular. Sternites well developed. Genital armature of the type peculiar to the genus. Basal plate a long rod extending forward to middle of third abdominal segment; ejaculatory bulb very long, reaching to about the middle of fourth abdominal segment, its walls provided with spikelike chitinizations; parameres short, stout, but slightly curved; endomeres poorly developed. Legs short, stout, with inflated femora; second pair slightly larger than first; third pair slightly larger than second; claws large, strongly curved, sharp. Length of male, 4.70 mm.; width, 1.20 mm. Type host and type locality.— Young cormorant, Chincha Island, Peru. Type (holotype).—Cat. No. 42849, U.S. N. M. Described from a single male in excellent condition, taken on the thigh of a young cormorant, in the stomach of a gull, Chincha Island, Peru, October 12, 1919 (Biological Survey stomach No. 156048). This species is especially interesting in shewing the development of a sensory seta posterior to each spiracle. In the marsupial-infesting sub-family Boopinae these setae are long and flagelliform and constitute a characteristic feature of the group. Colpocephalum ajajae, new species. Head about as broad as long and with deep, angulate ocular emargina- tions. Clypeal region of head emarginate laterally above each palpus, and also in front at the median line. Labrum much reduced; anteclypeal region (ventral clypeal region) provided with a pair of conspicuous, quadrate plates. Postero-lateral margins of forehead each provided with a pair of subequal, straight spines. Lateral dorsal regions of head scaled about the ocular emarginations. Thorax slightly longer than the head, and widest at its posterior margin. Pronotum with a straight transverse bar in front of the middle; with Ewing—Two New Generic Names of Mallophaga. 127 lateral, spine-bearing lobes and a posterior row of ten, subequal marginal setae. Prosternite represented only by a small, incomplete chitinous ring. Mesothorax about one-half as big as metathorax and indistinctly separated from the latter by a slight constriction and incomplete dorsal groove. Metathorax equal in width with the first abdominal segment, bearing three spinelike setae at each lateral angle and a posterior marginal row of ten dorsal setae. Abdomen long and slender, none of its nine complete segments reduced. Tergites undivided, not reduced; tergites I-VI completely fused with pleurites so as to form on each segment a single sclerite dorsally and later- ally; tergites VII-VIII completely fused with both pleurites and sternites, thus forming an uninterrupted ring of chitin respectively around segments Vil and VIII. Sternites I-VI free, not divided. Segment IX completely encased in a homogeneous flattened cone of chitinous integument. Dorsal setae arranged into two transverse rows on segments I-IV, into three irregular transverse rows on segment V; into 3—4 transverse rows on seg- ments VI-VIII; central area of segment IX without setae. Rodlike basal plate of male genital armature extending forward to about the middle of abdominal segment IV; parameres small, short, not extending beyond the tip of endomeral plate; dorsal chitinizations rather complicated. Legs well developed; second pair the smallest; femora III each with 3-4 ventral combs of small spines. Claws strongly curved, sharp. Length of male, 2.00 mm.; width, 0.62 mm. Type host and type locality.—A jaia ajaja, from Corpus Christi Pass, Texas. Type (holotype).—Cat. No. 42850, U.S. N. M. Described from a single male taken from the type host, at type locality, July 17, 1929, by Dr. Francis Harper. The presence of a pair of quadrate plates on the anteclypeus, which is ventral in position, presents a condition analogous to that found in Jbidoecus of the family Philopteridae, where the signatural plate (dorsal in position) is divided. Colpocephalum scleroderma, new species Head much broader than long, with large protruding temporal lobes. Labrum very small; anteclypeus (ventral part of clypeus) without plates; palpi extending beyond margin of head by full length of last segment; last seta in lateral marginal row of forehead, long, extending to about middle of temporal lobe, next to last short, somewhat spinelike. Thorax about as long as head. Prothorax about two-thirds as broad as head and overlapped dorsally by the occipital region of the former; each lateral lobe of pronotum bearing an anterior spine and a posterior seta. Prosternite reduced to a tubercle. Mesothorax small, scarcely half as large as the metathorax, but separated from the latter by a complete dorsal suture; it bears but a single pair of small dorsal setae. Metathorax large, broader than first abdominal segment and with 3-4 spinelike setae at each lateral angle. Abdomen short and broad, first segment largest, last segment completely surrounded on sides by lateral lobes of eighth segment. Tergites poorly BYR Se a | 128 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. sclerotized and each bearing a transverse row of setae along the posterior border. Spiracles very small, subequal and situated in tergites near the lateral borders. Pleurites very thick, well sclerotized, and bearing long spinelike setae. Sternites III-V each bearing a single comb of 15-20 small, spinelike setae. Rodlike basal plate of male genital armature extending forward to middle of first abdominal segment; parameres united and forming a broad parameral plate; dorsal chitinization simple, consisting of a broad plate which ends distally in a pair of stout, curved, lateral processes. Legs stout; first pair smallest; femora and tibiae of all legs with greatly thickened outer margins; claws rather weak, strongly curved. Length of male, 1.70 mm.; width, 0.75 mm. Type host and type locality—Musophaga rossae from Ituri Forest, Belgian Congo, Africa. : Type (holotype).—Cat. No. 42851, U.S. N. M. A single male from type.host and type locality, May 2, 1927. Received through Professor J. Bequaert (Dr. Strong No. 14). The very broad head and heavily sclerotized legs makes this species one of unusual appear- ance. Vol. 43, pp. 129-132 July 18, 1930 PROCEEDINGS OF THE BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WAS Hi -~x awe 2 en ~~ mer PLATYPSARIS.: ga me Hf BY A. J. VAN ROSSEM. Tenner Field work in the Mexican state of Sonora undertaken during the past eighteen months by J. T. Wright in the interest of Mr. Griffing Bancroft has resulted in the discovery of several new races of birds. Study of the specimens collected, most of which are now a part of the Dickey collection at the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology, Pasadena, shows that in the cases of at least two species whose ranges extend into the territory covered by the A. O. U. Check-list a change in status is necessary. The first of these is Camptostoma imberbe ridgwayz which Brewster (Bull. Nuttall Ornith. Club, 7, 1882, p. 208), on the basis of Arizona speci- mens, long ago distinguished from the typical race. The form remained in good standing for some years, but the range ascribed to it in the second edition (1896) of the Check-list took in too much territory (indeed a good slice of the range of typical zmberbe/) and finally Ridgway (Bull. U. S. Nat. Mus., 50, pt. 4, 1907, p. 414) eliminated it as an unrecognizable form, which it certainly is on the basis of the 1896 Check-list. However, if confined to extreme northwestern Mexico and southern Arizona there appears to be every reason for its recognition, for birds from that area present uniform and stable differences which set them off sharply from typical imberbe of Central America and eastern and southern Mexico. The characters given for ridgwayz by the original describer were larger bill and darker and more ashy coloration. The first of these is perfectly valid, as a glance at the accompanying table of measurements will show. As to color, while there is no doubt that ridgwayz is more ashy than imberbe in relatively worn plumage there appears to be no color difference whatever when fresh-plumaged specimens of ridgwayi and the paler individuals of iamberbe are compared. The matter of two types of coloration in the typical race seems to have been generally overlooked although Mr. Ridgway 1Contribution from the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. 18—Proc. Bron. Soc. WasH., Vou. 43, 1930. (129) 130 Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. (ibid., footnote) has suggested that sex might be responsible. Intimate personal field acquaintance with imberbe in El Salvador convinces me that the darker crowned, more olivaceous type and the more ashy type with the crown nearly concolor with the back are variants which occur independently of age or sex. The validity of ridgwayi appears to rest not alone in its larger bill, but in general size as well. Males are decidedly larger than females and I am inclined to suspect from the measurements given by Ridgway (ibid., p. 415) that faulty field determination of sex is in part responsible for the apparent size similarity of males and females.- The range of ridgwayi on the basis of 13 specimens of that form in the Dickey collection is confined to southern Arizona and south throughout Sonora. True imberbe ranges northward at least to Tepic, Nayarit (speci- men in the Dickey collection) on the Pacific coast, but which form occurs in Sinaloa is not known to me at the present time. Measurements of males in millimeters. Wing Tail Exp. Culmen 9 imberbe 51.0-54.5 39.0-48.5 7.2-8.0 6 ridgwayt 55.0-58.0 45.0-48.0 8.7-9.6 The inclusion of Sonora and Arizona specimens of Platypsaris aglaiae with true albiventris of Colima and Tepic is found to be incorrect. .The extreme northern birds constitute a very distinct race for which I propose the name of Platypsaris aglaiae richmondi,' subsp. nov. Type.—Male adult; no. 28,347, collection of Donald R. Dickey; Saric, Sonora, Mexico; May 14, 1929; collected by J. T. Wright, original number 3249. Subspecific characters—Most nearly resembling Platypsaris aglaiae albiventris (Xantus) of central western Mexico, but coloration of adult males slightly paler and very much grayer with no buffy or brownish tones; back ‘‘slate gray’? fading to “neutral gray” or “light neutral gray” on rump, upper tail coverts and rectrices; underparts more purely (less creamy or buffy) white, the flanks, sides and breast washed with ‘deep gull gray”’ or “light neutral gray.” In typical albiventris the corresponding parts of the adult males are washed or tinged with ‘“‘mouse grays” or “‘olive-grays.”’ Females with center of pileum “slate gray” fading to “light gull gray”’ or ‘pale gull gray” on forehead and deepening to “slate color” on nape; back nearly pure ‘‘neutral gray”’ fading to “‘light grayish olive” on rump; underparts very much paler than in albiventris; chin, throat and central abdominal region very pale (almost white) “light buff’’; pectoral region, flanks and under tail-coverts more or less tinged with “light, ochraceous buff.’’ The females of albiventris have the underparts almost uniform ‘cinnamon buff,” with only the chin and median abdominal region approaching white. 1Named for Dr. C. W. Richmond of the United States National Museum. 2Colors in quotes from Ridgway, Color Standards and Color Nomenclature, 1912. Van Rossem—Sonora Races Camptostoma and Platyp saris 131 Range.—The Mexican state of Sonora north into extreme southern Arizona. The whereabouts of the specimen recorded by Price (Auk, 5, 1888, p. 425) from the Huachuca Mountains in extreme southern Arizona, is unknown to me. There can be no question, however, that it belongs to richmondt, as in all probability do the records from the Pacific slope of Chihuahua. Remarks.—While the five females and the two young males of the new race are very uniform in color, save for the rose colored throats of the males, the ten adult males present two distinct extremes of coloration. These may be called the gray-bellied and white-bellied extremes. Although the two are fully connected by individual variation the gray type is the more common, for a somewhat arbitrary division places seven on the gray side and three on the white. The same variation is shown in the series of seven adult males of albiventris, the white (or to be more exact in this case, creamy white) type being represented by two birds to five of the darker birds. Xantus’ type of Hadrostomus albiventris which, by the courtesy of the U. 8. National. Museum, has been examined in the present connection, represents the white-bellied extreme. I have therefore selected the same color extreme to serve as the type of richmondi. The description of the adult male given by Ridgway (ibid., p. 856) applies much better to richmond: than to albiveniris and I strongly suspect was drawn from a specimen of the former race. In this most northern race of Platypsaris aglaiae there is, in the case of the females, an interesting uniformity of characters compared with the color variations seen in the extreme southern form latirostris. In the latter instance the long series of adult males presents variations similar to those seen in richmondi and albiventris. The equally comprehensive female series (all collected by the writer) shows scarcely any two which are identical, particularly in regard to the color of the pileum. That this variation is In any way dependent on age is impossible, for both gray headed and black headed extremes are represented not alone among the fully adult females, but among partially grown juveniles as well. Material examined.—Platypsaris aglaiae albiventris: Mexico: Nayarit (Tepic; Santiago), 6; Colima (plains of Colima; Colima), 3. 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